L 13 
.N89 
1918 
Copy 1 



L 13 
.N89 
1918 
Copy 1 



RECTORY, STANDARDS, STATISTICAL ANALYSIS 

AND 

LIST OF ACCREDITED SECONDARY SCHOOLS 

OF THE 



NORTH CENTRAL ASSOCIATION 



O? 



COLLEGES AND SECONDARY 
SCHOOLS 

ALSO 



\ 



The Special Study respecting the Junior High Schools 
in North Central Association Territory 



Edited by 

C. O. PAVIS 

SECRETARY OF THE COMMISSION ON 
SECONDARY SCHOOLS 



1918 



SPECIAL NOTE TO SCHOOL OFFICERS 

Schools desiring to become voting members of the Associa- 
tion, to be placed on the permanent maihng hst of the Associa- 
tion, to receive copies of the annual Proceedings and other 
valuable bulletins and circulars issued by the Association, and 
to enjoy the enhanced prestige which membership in the Asso- 
ciation affords, are urged to write the Treasurer, Principal 
Milo H. Stuart, Technical High School, Indianapolis, In- 
diana, and enclose the annual fee of two dollars. The mem- 
bership fee includes the contemplated accrediting fee. 









J 
Mi 



f^ 



FOREWORD. 



"The object of the Association shall be to establish closer relations between the 
secondary schools and the institutions of higher education within the North Central 
states and such other territory as the Association may recognize." — Constitution, Ar- 
ticle II. 

The aim of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools is, 
therefore, first, to bring about a better acquaintance, a keener sympathy, and a heartier 
co-operation between the colleges and secondary schools of this territory; second, to 
consider common educational problems and to devise best ways and means of solving 
them; and, third, to promote the physical, intellectual and moral well-being of students 
by urging proper sanitary conditions of school buildings, adequate library and labora- 
tory facilities, and higher standards of scholarship and of remuneration of teachers. 

That these aims are, to a large degree, realized is evidenced by the steady growth 
of the Association in territorial accessions, in number of affiliated and accredited schools 
and colleges, and in the power and prestige exercised throughout the country in respect 
to educational policies and practices. The Association is, beyond all doubt, the most 
generally recognized standardizing educational agency in the Northwest, — if indeed it 
does not rank first in prestige in the entire United States. 

Founded twenty-three years ago by a little group of foresighted men representing 
but a small number of institutions situated in a small number of states, the Association 
today includes in its territory eighteen states, and in its membership 135 institutions of 
higher education and 460 institutions of secondary school rank. Moreover, besides 
accrediting a goodly number of colleges and universities, the Association has this year 
stamped with its approval 1,213 high schools and academies. 

It is therefore a distinct honor for any institution to hold affiliated or accredited 
relationship with this body. The Association's official recognition gives prestige to a 
school among educated men and women everywhere. Its recorded approval is a letter 
of introduction to all colleges, universities and professional schools in the land, and 
guarantees efficiency and high standing to these institutions. Accredited relations with 
the Association bring to a secondary school the same distinction and honor as an 
institution that membership in the society of Phi Beta Kappa or Sigma Xi confers upon 
an individual, or that high rating by Bradstreet or Dunn brings to a firm in business. 
Moreover, membership in the Association aids boards of education to secure better 
prepared teachers, to erect barriers against untrained teachers, and in general to raise 
educational standards in their communities. It is the hope of the Association that all 
- schools which are accredited by it will cherish the honor and seek to uphold the stand- 
ards mutually and co-operatively established. 



Detailed information respecting the organization and procedure of the Association 
may be secured by addressing its Secretary, Principal Henry E. Brown, Kenilworth, 
Illinois. Copies of the Annual Proceedings may be had (price 25 cents) by addressing 
the Treasurer, Principal Milo H. Stuart, Technical High School, Indianapolis, Indiana. 
Specific information respecting the standing and condition of any given school may be 
had by adressing the official high school inspector in the state concerned. Additional 
copies of the list of accredited schools may be secured (inclosing stamp) from the 
Secretary of the Commission, Professor C. O. Davis, Ann Arbor, Mchigan. 



The next annual meeting of the Association will be held in Chicago the week of 
March 17, 1919. 



NORTH CENTRAL ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGES AND 
SECONDARY SCHOOLS. 



1918-1919. 



Officers of the Commission on 
Secondary Schools. 
Chairman, A. A. Reed, 
University of Nebraska, 
Lincoln, Neb. 
Secretary, C. O. Davis, 
University of Michigan, 
Ann Arbor, Mich. 



Officers of the Association. 
President, George Buck, 
Shortridge High School, 
Indianapolis, Ind. 
First Vice-President, W. W. Charters, 
University of Illinois, 
Urbana, 111. 
Second Vice-President, Ira M. Allen, 

Springfield, 111. 
Secretary, Henry E. Brown, 
New Trier Twp. High School, 
Kenilworth, 111. 
Treasurer, Milo H. Stuart, 
Technical High School, 
Indianapolis, Ind. 

AIEMBERS OF THE COMMISSION ON SECONDARY SCHOOLS. 

Excerpt taken from the Revised Constitution of the Association : 
Sec 5. The Commission on Secondary Schools shall consist of (a) the High 
School Examiner or corresponding officer for the State University in each state within 
the territory of the Association; or, in case there is no such officer, some member of 
its faculty designated by the State University for the purpose; (b) the Inspector of 
High Schools, if any, of the State department of Public Instruction in each state with- 
in the territory of the Association; (c) a Principal of a Secondary School accredited 
by the Association, to be elected by the Association on the nomination of the Execu- 
tive Committee for a period of three years, one-third of the number to be elected each 
year; and (d) eighteen other persons to be elected by the Association on the nomina- 
tion of the Executive Committee for a period of three years, one-third of the number 
to be elected each year. 

This Commission shall prepare, subject to the approval of the Association, a state- 
ment of the standards to be met by Secondary Schools accredited by the Association; 
shall make such inspection of schools as it deems necessary, and shall prepare for the 
Executive Committee lists of the Secondary Schools within the territory of the Asso- 
ciation which conform to the standards prescribed. 

MEMBERS OF THE COMMISSION. 
1918-1919. 



Arizona. 

^University, A. O. Neal, Tucson. 
State Department, 



High School, Foster S. Randle, Globe. 

Colorado. 

^University, William A. Cook, Boulder. 
State Department, None. 
High School, H. Allen Nye, Colorado 
Springs. 

Illinois. 

*University, H. A. HoUister, Urbana. 
State Department, J. C. Hanna, Springfield. 
High School, C. P. Briggs, Rockford. 



Indiana. 

*University, Hubert G. Childs, Blooming- 
ton. 

State Department, O. H. Williams, Indian- 
apolis. 

High School, T. W. Record, Terre Haute. 

Iowa. 
^University, John E. Foster, Des Moines. 
State Department, M. R. Fayram, 

Des Moines. 
High School, Wm. H. Blakely, Fort Dodge. 

Kansas. 
University, W. H. Johnson. Lawrence. 
*State Department, O. B. Seyster, Topeka. 
High School, W. A. Bailey, Kansas City. 



* Names starred are those in each state to whom correspondence respecting local 
questions of a North Central Association nature should be addressed. 



Michigan. 
*University, J. B. Edmonson, Ann Arbor. 
State Department, John Munson, Lansing. 
High School, E. L. Miller, Detroit. 

Minnesota. 
"University, F. H. Swift, St. Paul. 
*State Department, E. M. Phillips, St. Paul. 
High School, C. C. Baker, Albert Lea. 

Missouri. 
^University, J. D. EUiff, Columbia. 
State Department, P. P. Callaway, 

Jefferson City. 
High School, J. L. Shouse, Kansas City. 

Montana. 
*University, E. C. Elliott, Helena. 
State Department, Miss May Trumper, 

Helena. 
High School, Geo. A. Ketcham, Missoula. 

Nebraska. 
^University, A. A. Reed, Lincoln. 
State Department, A. H. Dixon, Lincoln. 
High School, A. R. Congdon, Fremont. 

New Mexico 

University, Dr. David R. Boyd, Albu- 
querque. 

*State Department, J. H. Wagner, Santa 
Fe. 

High School, G. B. Jones, Albuquerque. 



North Dakota. 

University, C. C. Schmidt, University. 
*State Department, E. R. Edwards, 

Jamestown. 
High School, W. G. Stebbins, Grand Forks. 

Ohio. 

*University, Geo. R. Twiss, Columbus. 
State Department, C. E. Oliver, Columbus. 
High School, Charles H. Lake, Cleveland. 

Oki^ahoma. 

^University, A. C. Parsons, Norman. 

State Department, None. 

High School, J. G. Mitchell, Pryor. 

South Dakota. 

University, James B. Shouse, Vermillion. 
*State Department, Charles T. King, Pierre. 
High School, J. W. Browning, Brookings. 

Wisconsin. 

*Uniyersity, Thomas Lloyd Jones, Madison. 
State Department, H. L. Terry, Madison. 
High School, Paul G. W. Keller, Appleton. 

Wyoming. 

*Uni-versity, J. E. Butterworth, Laramie. 
State Department, T. B. McDonough, 

Cheyenne. 
High School, J. J. Marshall, Sheridan. 



MEMBERS AT LARGE. 



CI<ASS OF 1919. 



Sister Clara, St. Catherine's College, St. Paul, Minn. 

R. B. Crane, Hastings College, Hastings, Neb. 

J. D. Elliff, University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. 

W. A. Jessup, University of Iowa, Iowa City, la. 

Th. F. Kane, University of North Dakota, University, N. D. 

W. P. McKee, Frances Shimer School, Mt. Carroll, 111. 

CLASS OF 1920. 

Th. W. Butcher, State Normal School, Emporia, Kan. 

L. D. Coffman, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. 

Ch. N. Cole, Oberlin College, Oberlin, O. 

F. A. Hall, Washington U^niversity, St. Louis, Mo. 

H. B. Loomis, Hyde Park High School, Chicago, 111. 

E. V. Tubbs, High School, Tulsa, Okla. 



CLASS OF I92I. 

W. G. Bate, High School, Mankato, Minn. 

C. B. Curtis, Central High School, St. Louis, Mo. 

C. O. Davis, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 

E. E. Jones, Northwestern University, Evanston, 111. 

Ellen C. Sabin, Milwaukee-Downer College, Milwaukee, Wis. 

Anna C. Wilson, High School, Crawfordsville, Ind. 



STANDARDS OF ACCREDITING SECONDARY SCHOOLS. 

1. A. No school shall be accredited which does not require fifteen units for 
graduation. 

A unit course of study in a secondary school is defined as a course covering an 
academic year that shall include in the aggregate not less than the equivalent of one 
hundred twenty sixty-minute-hours of class room work, two hours of shop or labora- 
tory work being equivalent to one hour of prepared class room work. 

More than twenty periods per week of academic subjects, or twenty-five periods 
including vocational subjects, exclusive of choral music and physical training, should 
be discouraged except in the cases of pupils having more than average ability. 

B. The school year shall consist of a minimum of thirty-six zveeks. 

2. All teachers teaching one or more academic subjects must satisfy the following 
requirements : 

A. The minimum attainment of teachers of any academic subject shall be equiva- 
lent to graduation from a college belonging to the North Central Association of Col- 
leges and Secondary Schools requiring the cotnpletion of a four year course of study 
or 120 semester hours in advance of a standard four year high school course. Such 
requirement shall not be construed as retroactive. 

B. The minimum professional training of teachers of any academic subject shall 
be at least eleven semester hours in education. This should include special study of 
the subject matter and pedagogy of the subject to be taught. Such requirements shall 
not be construed as retroactive. (For the succeeding year the Board will interpret 
courses in education as the same courses are interpreted by the colleges or universities 
offering them.) 

The Association advises that the following types of courses should be oflrered as 
meeting the spirit of this standard : Educational ps}fchology, principles of secondary 
education, theory of teaching, special methods in subjects taught, observation and 
practice teaching, history of education and educational sociology. 

C. If a teacher of one or more academic subjects new to a given school does 
not fully meet the requirements of Standard 2, A and B, a statement concerning the 
training, experience, salaries and efficiency of the said teacher, certified by the super- 
intendent or principal, shall be presented by them to the inspector, along with the an- 
nual report of the school; and the inspector shall submit the same to the Commission, 
together with his recommendation The Commission shall, on each case so presented, 
make a decision. 

3. A. The number of daily periods of class room instruction given by any 
teacher should not exceed five. The Commission will reject all schools having more 
than six recitation periods per day for any teacher. 

B. The minimum length of a recitation period shall be forty minutes exclusive 
of all time used in the changing of classes or teachers. 

For interpreting this standard in connection with laboratory work in science and 
in vocational subjects, as hereafter defined, and in connection with study room super- 
vision, a double period may be counted as the equivalent of one class room exercise, 
provided that no combination of such work amounting to more than thirty-five periods 
a week be required of any teacher. 

For schools having some definite plan of supervised study, not more than five 
classes per day should be assigned to any teacher, with the advice that the maximum 
be four. 

4. The laboratory and library facilities shall be adequate to the needs of instruc- 
tion in the subjects taught. 

5. The location and construction of the buildings, the lighting, heating, and ven- 
tilation of the rooms, the nature of the lavatories, corridors, closets, water supply, 
school furniture, apparatus, and methods of cleaning shall be such as to insure hygienic 
conditions for both pupils and teachers. 

6. The efficiency of instruction, the acquired habits of thought and study, the 
general intellectual and moral tone of a school are paramount factors, and therefore 
only schools zvhich rank zvell in these particulars, as evidenced by rigid, thorough- 
going, sympathetic inspection, shall be considered eligible for the list. 



7. The association will decline to consider any school unless such school is in 
the highest class of schools as officially listed by the properly constituted educational 
authorities of the state. The association recommends the introduction of the so- 
called vocational subjects, such as agriculture, manual training, household arts, and 
commercial subjects into schools where local conditions render such introduction 
feasible, but the inspectors will hold that a sufficient number of qualified teachers must 
be added to provide adequately for such instruction. 

S. No school shall be considered unless the regular annual blank furnished for 
the purpose shall have been properly and completely filled out and placed on file zvith 
the inspector. Schools in good standing will make a complete report on teachers once 
in five years ; but full data relative to changes should be presented annually. 

9. No school whose records show an excessive number of pupils per teacher, 
based on average attendance, shall be accredited. The association recommends twenty- 
five as a maximum. The association believes that effective work can rarely be done 
in classes of more than thirty pupils. 

10. New schools, hereafter seeking accrediting, shall submit evidence {e.g. a res- 
olution') shozving an approval of the standards of the association and of the applica- 
tion for membership by the local board nf education or school trustees. 

11. The time for which schools are accredited shall be limited to one year, dating 
from the time of the adoption of the list by the association. 

12. The agent of communication between the accredited schools and the secre- 
tary of the commission for the purpose of distributing, collecting, and filing the an- 
nual reports of such schools and for such other purposes as the association may direct, 
is as follows : 

(a) In states having such an official, the inspector of schools appointed by the 
state university, (b) In other states the inspector of schools appointed by state au- 
thority, or, if there be no such official, such person or persons as the secretary of the 
commission may elect, (c) // any state fails for two successive years to send one 
or more official representatives to the annual meeting of the Commission on Secondary 
Schools, the schools of that state may, by vote of the Association, be dropped from 
the accredited list. 

The association is conservative, believing that such policy will eventually work to 
the highest interests of all. It aims to accredit only those schools which possess or- 
ganization, teaching force, standards of scholarship, equipment and esprit de corps, 
of such character as will unhesitatingly commend them to any educator, college, or 
university in the North Central territory. 



ITEMS OF GENERAL INTEREST. 

1. No. new schools added in 1918 = 89; one year ago := 75. 

2. No. old schools dropped in igi8=: 33; one year ago =139. 

3. Total number accredited in 1918:= 1,213; one year ago =1,165. 

4. No. new schools, 1918, by states: Ohio, 14; Nebraska, 13; Illinois and Okla- 
homa, 12 each; Missouri, 8; Michigan and Wisconsin, 5 each; New Mexico, 4; Iowa, 
Kansas, and North Dakota, 3 each ; Indiana and Wyoming, 2 each ; Arizona, Minne- 
sota, and South Dakota, one each; and Colorado and Montana, none. 

5. No. schools dropped, 1918, by states : Arizona, Colorado, Montana, Minnesota, 
Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming — nine states — none; 
Indiana, Oklahoma and South Dakota, one each; Iowa, 2; Illinois, 3; Kansas, 4; 
Michigan and Ohio, 6 each ; Missouri, 7. 

6. No. schools, 1918, reporting Junior High Schools or some modified form of 
the old 8-4 plan = 293. 

7. No. schools accredited by states, 1918: 

Arizona 8 Minnesota 78 Oklahoma 31 

Colorado 37 Missouri 62 South Dakota 25 

Illinois 172 Montana 25 Wisconsin 106 

Indiana 83 Nebraska 77 Wyoming 8 

Iowa 80 New Mexico 12 

Kansas 72 North Dakota 36 Total 1213 

Michigan 118 Ohio 183 



I9I7 
40o8 

I0I2S 

1788 
4169 


1916 
3043 
9809 
1546 
4084 


20090 


18501 


414 




17 




24 





8. No. Junior High Schools reported, 1918:* 

Arizona 3 Minnesota 2>2' Oklahoma 8 

Colorado 9 Missouri 4 South Dakota 7 

Illinois 15 Montana Wisconsin 17 

Indiana ZZ Nebraska 26 Wyoming 3 

Iowa 16 New Mexico 3 

Kansas 28 North Dakota 17 Total 293 

Michigan 43 Ohio 29 

9. The following additional summarizing facts are interesting: 

1918 

(a) No. new academic teachers 3814 

(b) No. not new academic teachers 9577 

(c) No. new vocational teachers i795 

(d) No. not new vocational teachers 4242 

(e) No. part (a) and (c) 495 

(f) No. part (b) and (d) 1018 

(g) Total number teachers 20941 

(h) No. Schools having eight period day 422 

(i) No. Schools having more than eight periods 47 

(j) No. Schools having 60 minute class periods. 58 

(k) No. Schools having more than 60 minute periods 35 

10. Resolution adopted, 1918, regarding Junior High Schools : 

"Resolved, That the term Junior High School as used by this Association shall 
be understood to apply only to schools including the ninth grade combined with the 
eighth grade, or with the eighth and the seventh grades, in an organization distinct 
from the grades above and the grades below." 

11. Resolution adopted, 1918, regarding war service teaching: 

"Resolved, That as an organization representing fundamentally the interests of 
secondary and higher education we [the North Central Association] are seriously con- 
cerned lest in this war emergency the sudden withdrawal of so many of our trained 
men^and women from the teaching ranks of our high schools result in a harmful de- 
preciation of standards of instruction. 

"We therefore make an urgent appeal to all graduates of standard colleges and 
universities, including young women and also men not subject to draft, and who are 
in a position to render such service, that they volunteer as teachers in high schools. 

"In order to facilitate the registration of such volunteers we ask that State De- 
partments of Public Instruction and Appointment Committees of Colleges and Uni- 
versities tender their services for such registration, and that such offers of service 
be made known through the public press. 

"State Boards of Education and State Departments of Public Instruction are also 
requested to make such temporary adjustments as may be necessary in order that 
those thus volunteering to teach may be duly certified. 

"Resolved, further, That the State Superintendent of Public Instruction in each 
state be requested to call a conference of representatives of the educational institu- 
tions in the state, for the purpose of formulating plans for putting this resolution 
into effect." 

12. Resolution adopted, 1918, regarding form of blanks for 1919: 

The Committee on Blanks for next year made an extensive report advising the 
employment of three separate forms: 

A. One containing such items only as pertain to matters essential for the proper 
accrediting of the schools of regular standing. 

B. One to contain items used to accredit new schools and schools that have been 
warned the previous year. 

C. One to gather material bearing on any special study that may be authorized. 

13. Resolutions adopted, 1918, regarding special studies to be made in 1919: 

(a) Resolved, That a specal committee be appointed to make an investigation 
and to report at the next annual meeting what bearing and effect the size of classes 
has on the quality of work in the high schools of the North Central Association. 



* For the names of the schools see starred lists printed herein. 



(b) Resolved, That a committee be appointed to investigate and report at the 
next annual meeting what (if any) modifications of standards should be made in 
order to secure a more adequate recognition of vocational education, especially in 
accordance with the Smith-Hughes Act. 

14. The following special studies are planned by the Commission for early in- 
vestigation : 

(a) Effect of the war on programs of studies and on elections of different studies 
by pupils. 

(b) High School Libraries, their organization and equipment. 

(c) Vocational subjects in the secondary schools. 

(d) Graduation requirements in accredited schools. 

15. The referendum vote prescribing an annual fee of one or two dollars for each 
accredited school resulted as follows : 

(a) No. schools eligible to vote 1218 

(b) No. schools favoring the fee 1069 = 87.76% 

(c) No. schools opposing the fee Si = 4.18% 

(d) No. schools not voting 98= 8.04% 



ACCREDITED SCHOOLS 
ARIZONA 



NAMEOIf 


OFFICER IN charge; 


DATE OF 


NUMBER OF 


HIGH SCHOOL 


TOWN AND SCHOOIy 


(SUPT. 0RPRIN.)t 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROLLMENT 


*Bisbee (7-8-9)$ 


E. I. Snider 


I917 


18 


229 


*Globe (7-8) 


W. P. Bland 


1916 


15 


173 


Mesa 


H. E. Matthews 


1918 


13 


293 


Phoenix 


R. T. Cook 


1916 


38 


916 


Prescott 


S. H. Martin 


I917 


II 


131 


Thatcher : 










Gila Acad. 


A. C. Peterson 


I917 


9 


222 


Tucson 


H. Steele 


1917 


18 


302 


*Winslow (7-8) 


G. E. Cornelius 


1917 


9 


107 


Total 8 


COLORADO 








Aspen 


H. H. Van Fleet 


1914 


7 


99 


Boulder : 










State Prep. 


S. S. Kingsbury 


1908 


24 


613 


Canon City: 










Canon City 


M. L. Whittaker 


1904 


13 


263 


South Canon 


G. B. Warner 


1909 


8 


71 


Colorado Springs 


H. Allen Nye 


1908 


41 


1005 


*Cripple Creek (7-8-9) 


W. M Shafer 


1907 


14 


169 


Delta 


E. H. Homberger 


1909 


II 


188 


Denver : 










East Side 


H. M. Barrett 


1908 


46 


1042 


Manual Training 


C. A. Bradley 


1908 


46 


914 


North Side 


E. L. Brown 


1907 


60 


1456 


South Side 


D. M. Carson 


1908 


24 


510 


West Side 


Laura H. Pettit 


1907 


25 


499 


Durango 


E. E. Smiley 


1905 


14 


310 


Eaton 


H. E. Black 


1914 


8 


93 


Fort Collins 


Grant Gordon 


1908 


16 


317 


Fort Morgan 


W. A. Franks 


1909 


14 


216 



* Schools marked thus report a modified form of the 8-4 plan or a Junior High School, 
t In general, the name of the principal is given as the officer in charge if the school 

enrolls 300 pupils and employs 15 teachers; in other cases the name of the 

superintendent of schools is given, 
t Figures in parentheses following the name of a school indicate the grades which are 

included in the local Junior High School. 



NAME OP 


OFFICER IN CHARGE 


DATE OF 


NUMBER OF 


HIGH SCH 


TOWN AND SCHOOL 


(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


Enroi.lm: 


Fruita : 










Union High School 


Minnie 0. Hall 


1912 


8 


IIO 


Glenwood Springs : 










Garfield County 


Elmer Underwood 


I912 


9 


116 


Golden 


W. H. Simons 


1905 


6 


IIS 


Grand Junction 


R. E. Tope 


1905 


15 


347 


*Greeley (7-8) 


W. S. Roe 


1904 


20 


427 


Gunnison : 










Gunnison County 


J. H. Kelley 


1915 


10 


131 


La Junta 


Fred P. Austin 


1908 


13 


222 


Las Animas : 










Bent County 


Edwin A. Schreck 


I9II 


12 


151 


*LeadvilIe (8) 


Joseph A. Walton 


1904 


13 


142 


*Longmont (7-8-9A) 


C. C. Casey 


1907 


16 


213 


Loveland 


R. W. Truscott 


1906 


13 


264 


Monte Vista 


Geo. R. Momyer 


1908 


9 


130 


Montrose : 










Montrose County 


L. D. Hightower 


I91S 


15 


279 


Pueblo : 










Centennial 


C. K. Fletcher 


1908 


25 


528 


♦Central (8A) 


D. K. Dunton 


1908 


21 


488 


Rocky Ford 


James H. Wilson 


1909 


16 


204 


Salida 


E. Kesner 


1908 


10 


182 


*Telluride (7-8) 


W. E. Baker 


I914 


8 


S4 


Trinidad 


F. H. Merton 


1904 


19 


429 


*Victor (7-8-9) 


W. M. Shafer 


1908 


II 


161 


West Colorado Springs: 










Colorado City 


E. C. Best 


I914 


8 


96 


Total 37 


ILLINOIS 








Alton : 










High School 


B. C. Richardson 


1906 


22 


358 


W. Mil. Acad. 


Geo. D. Eaton 


1908 


15 


250 


Aurora : 










East 


K. D. Waldo 


1905 


29 


s6o 


West 


A A. Rea 


1905 


20 


361 


Jennings Sem. 


Bertha A. Barber 


I9II 


9 


.81 


Batavia 


Edith Sheoerd 


I914 


12 


192 


Beardstown 


H. G. Russell 


I913 


13 


258 


*Belleville Tp. (7-8) 


H. G. Schmidt 


I914 


21 


436 


Belvidere 


J. Frances Graves 


I914 


17 


355 


Benton Tp. 


C. W. Houk 


1917 


10 


184 


Bloomington 


William Wallis 


19OS 


28 


707 


Blue Island 


J. E. Lemon 


I917 


15 


204 


Bridgeport Tp. 


Byron R. Lewis 


I912 


10 


. 193 


Cairo 


Geo. A. Peterson 


1909 


13 


263 


Carbondale : 










Nor. Univ. H. S. 


W. A. Furr 


I915 






Carthage : 










High School 


S. Parry Grubb 


1918 


9 


185 


College Acad. 


H D. Hoover 


1908 


7 


63 


Centralia Tp. 


L. W. Hanna 


I9IO 


19 


335 


Champaign 


Lottie Switzer 


1906 


30 


654 


Charleston 


E. B. Freshwater 


1912 


II 


2X0 


Chicago : 










Austin 


Geo. H. Rockwood 


1908 


56 


1720 


Bowen 


Clarence E. DeButts 


1905 


35 


IIOI 


Calumet 


Grsnt Beebe 


1905 


21 


541 


Carl Schurz 


Walter F. Slocum 


I912 


76 


2214 


Crane Tech. 


Wm. J. Bartholf 


I90S 


78 


1977 


Englewood 


T. E. Armstrong 


1 90s 


67 


2037 


Fenger 


Thos. C. Hill 


1905 


26 


732 



NAME 0? 
TOWN AND SCHOOL 

Harrison Tech. 

Hyde Park 

Lake View 

Lane Tech. 

*Lucy Flower Tech. 
(7-8) 

McKinley 

Marshall 

Medill 

Morgan Park Prep. 

Parker 

Phillips 

Senn 

Tilden 

Tuley 

Waller 

F. W. Parker 

Harvard Sch. for Boys 

Kenwood-Loring Sch. 

Latin School 

Loyola Academy 

Morgan Park Prep. 

North Park Col. Acad. 

Starrett Sch. for Girls 

Univ. High School 
Chicago Heights : 

Bloom Tp. 
Chrisman Tp. 
Cicero : 

J. Sterling Morton Tp. 
Clinton 

Collinsville Tp. 
Crystal Lake 
Danville 
*Decatur (7-8) 
DeKalb Tp. 
Des Plaines : 

Maine Tp. 
Dixon 

Downers Grove 
^Dundee (7-8-9) 
DuQuoin Tp. 
Dwight Tp. 
East St. Louis 
Edwardsville 
Elgin : 

High School 

Academy 
Elmhurst : 

Evang. Proseminar 
Eureka Tp. 
Evanston : 

Tp. High School 

Academy 
Fairbury Tp. 
Farmer City: 

Moore Tp. 
Flora : 

Harter-Stanford Tp. 
Freeport 
Galena 
Galesburg 



OFFICER IN CHARGE 
(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 

Frank L. Morse 
Hiram B. Loomis 
B. Frank Brown 
Wm. J. Bogan 



DATE OE NUMBER OF HIGH SCHOOL 
ACCREDITING TEACHERS ENROLLMENT 
I913 76 2218 

1905 81 2677 

1 90s 65 1978 

191 I 84 2008 



Dora Wells 


1915 


16 


353 


Geo. M. Clayburg 


1905 


33 


903 


Louis J. Block 


1905 


54 


1606 


Avon S. Hall 


1905 


33 


996 


Wm. Schoch 


1908 


IS 


401 


Chas. W. French 


1915 


44 


1280 


Chas. H. Perrine 


1905 


54 


1402 


B. F. Buck 


1914 


84 


2340 


Edw. C. Rossiter 


1908 


33 


8S2 


Franklin P. Fisk 


190S 


41 


1247 


J. E. Adams 


1905 


33 


993 


Laura J. Cooke 


1913 


27 


127 


J. J. Schobinger 


1911 


8 


55 


Stella Dyer-Loring 


1918 


8 


41 


R. P. Bates 


1911 


16 


158 


J. J. O'Callaghan 


1913 


16 


276 


Harry D. Abells 


1911 


7 


84 


David Nyvall 


1917 


5 


80 


Mary Gomar White 


1916 


9 


43 


F. W. Johnson 


1911 


37 


438 


E. L. Boyer 


1907 


17 


28s 


Levett Kimmel 


1916 


6 


no 


H. V. Church 


1 90s 


41 


596 


Everett L. Walters 


191 1 


12 


257 


A. E. Arendt 


1912 


ID 


242 


C. E. Smalley 


1916 


7 


107 


W. C. Baer 


1906 


51 


625 


Thos. M. Deam 


190S 


48 


III7 


C. W. Whitten 


1905 


21 


318 


C. M. Himel 


1908 


IS 


211 


H. C. Fiester 


190S 


15 


242 


Noble R. Feasley 


1918 


8 


16S 


MoUie Drew Butts 


1909 


9 


161 


Jas. G. Stull 


1908 


9 


201 


C. A. Brothers 


1916 


8 


124 


H J. Alvis 


1911 


42 


803 


R C. Sayre 


1913 


13 


242 


W. L. Goble 


1905 


38 


834 


Ernest P. Clark 


1906 


7 


32 


Daniel Irion 


1910 


8 


150 


C. B. Hitch 


1916 


9 


los 


Wilfred F. Beardsley 


190S 


54 


1042 


Edward W. Marcellus 


1907 






E. W. Powers 


1916 


9 


145 


Geo. E. Anspaugh 


1 90s 


6 


129 


H. J. Blue 


1916 


9 


176 


L. A. Fulwider 


1906 


24 


595 


Walter T. Schrenk 


1918 


ID 


190 


A. W. Willis 


1910 


32 


902 



NAME OF 
TOWN AND SCHOOI, 

Galva 

Genesee Tp. 
Geneva 

Georgetown Tp. 
Gibson City: 

Drummer Tp. 
Godfrey : 

Monticello Sem. 
Granite City 
Harrisburg Tp. 
Harvard 
Harvey : 

Thornton Tp. 
Herrin Tp. 
Highland Park: 

Deerfield-Shields Tp. 
Hinsdale Tp. 
Hoopeston 
Jacksonville : 

*High School (7-8) 

111. Woman's Coll. 

Acad. 

Whipple Academy 
Joliet Tp. 
Kankakee 
Kenilworth : 

New Trier Tp. 
Kewanee 
Knoxville 
La Grange: 

Lyons Tp. 
Lake Forest: 

Academy 

Ferry Hall 
La Salle: 

La Salle^Peru Tp. 
Lawrenceville Tp. 
Lewistown 
Lexington 
Lincoln 
Lockport Tp. 
Lovington Tp. 
Macomb : 

Acad. Dept. Nor. Sch. 
Marshall Tp. 
Mattoon 
Maywood : 

Proviso Tp. 
Mendota Tp. 
Moline 

*Monmouth (7-8) 
Morris 
Morrison 
Mt. Carmel 
Mt. Carroll: 

Frances Shimer Sch. 
Mt. Vernon Tp. 
Murphysboro Tp. 
Naperville : 

High School 

North W. Col. Acad. 



OFFICEE IN CHARGE BATE OE NUMBER OE HIGH SCHOOL 

(SUPT. ORPRIN.) ACCREDITING TEACHERS ENROLLMENT 

Margaret E. Jacobson 1917 9 136 

F. J. Mabrey 1910 12 196 

Lucy E. Church 1914 7 130 

W. J. Stronks 1918 8 117 



J. R. Cranor 


1914 


10 


169 


Elizabeth A. Rose 
W. F. Coolidge 
Harry Taylor 
Chas. 0. Haskell 


1911 
1917 
1908 
1918 


25 

19 

14 
II 


173 
240 

341 
191 


Lewis W. Smith 
M. L. Beanblossom 


1 90s 
1917 


28 
10 


399 
180 


Richard L. Sandwick 
H. D. Hughes 
F L. Tibits 


1906 
1908 
1908 


24 
12 
26 


402 
142 
203 


T. W. Callihan 


1909 


20 


410 


Jos. R. Harker 
J. P. McCoy 
J. Stanley Brown 
E. E. Richards 


1908 
1912 
1905 
1906 


5 

70 
18 


36 

1 195 

404 


Henry E. Brown 
L P. Rinker 
Carl E. Larson 


1906 
1906 
1918 


18 
13 


752 

353 
122 


G. H. Wilkinson 


1905 


28 


459 


J. W. Richards 
Marion Coats 


1908 
1909 


13 
28 


130 

104 


T. T. McCormack 
G. B. Williams 
E. F. Roberts 
G. H. Calhoun 
Bert Hudgins 
Arvid P. Zetterberg 
L. W. Chatham 


190S 
1914 
1916 
1916 
1911 
1911 
1918 


16 

12 

9 

5 

14 
10 

8 


358 
251 
155 

71 
297 
153 

97 


W. P. Morgan 
W. E. Harnish 
H. B. Black 


1910 
1909 
1908 


23 
9 

12 


240 
212 
346 


J. L. Thalman 
Ralph E Beebe 
E P. Nutting 
Chas. E. Bell 
M. G. Davis 
Anna Potter 
L. 0. Bright 


1908 
1918 
190S 
1918 
1911 
1914 
1918 


30 
13 
31 
30 
12 
9 
13 


531 
228 

815 
515 
243 
153 
292 


Wm. P. McKee 
Silas Echols 
A. N. Thurston 


1909 
1909 
1911 


17 
12 
10 


93 

267 
146 


V. Branche Graham 
C. J. Attig 


1915 
1912 


II 

5 


172 
40 



NAME OI' 


OlfFlCER IN CHARGE DATE OP 


NUMBER OP 


HIGH SCH 


TOWN AND SCHOOI. 


(SUPT. OR PRIN.) ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROtEM 


Normal : 










*High School (7-8) 


Mildred H. Felmley ] 


906 


14 


164 


Normal Univ. H. S. 


Ralph W. Pringle ] 


915 


14 


232 


Oakland Tp. 


H. E. Knarr ] 


918 


5 


82 


Oak Park: 










Oak Park and River 










Forest Tp. 


M. R. McDaniel ] 


90s, 


61 


1439 


Olney Tp. 


H. W. Hostettler 


[917 


10 


229 


Onarga : 










Tp. High School 


L. W. Haviland 


[918 


9 


IIO 


Grand Prairie Sem. 


Hubert Phillips ] 


908 


9 


46 


Ottawa Tp. 


Chas. H. Kingman ] 


90s 


20 


434 


Palestine Tp. 


D. B. Fager ] 


[917 


8 


164 


Pana Tp. 


W. E. Andrews 


[916 


12 


258 


Paris 


J. R. Everett 


[911 


18 


468 


Paxton 


W. R. Thacher 


[911 


9 


175 


Pekin 


R. Y. Allison 


[911 


16 


312 


Peoria : 










Bradley Poly. Inst. 


T. C. Burgess 


[908 


28 


IS2 


Central H. S. 


W. T. VanBuskirk 


[905 


39 


759 


Man. Training H. S. 


W. N. Brown 


1913 


29 


S09 


Petersburg 


J. B. Hendricks 


[916 


6 


128 


Polo 


Elsie M English 


[907 


9 


iSS 


Pontiac Tp. 


G. J. Koons 


[90s 


16 


31S 


Princeton Tp. 


W. R. Spurrier 


1 90s 


15 


368 


Quincy 


J. F. Wellemeyer 


[906 


27 


427 


Riverside-Brookfield 


Geo J. Mueller 


[917 


14 


123 


Robinson Tp. 


P. M. Watson 


[911 


12 


275 


Rockford 


C. P. Briggs 


[90s 


71 


1484 


Rock Island : 










High School 


A. J. Burton 


[905 


34 


650 


Augustana Acad. 


Gustav A. Andreen : 


[911 


9 


81 


*St. Charles (7-8) 


G. E. Thompson 


[910 


8 


112 


Savanna Tp. 


C. D. Donaldson 


[906 


II 


170 


Shelbyville 


Paul K. Theobald 


[913 


II 


181 


Sidell Tp. 


Harvey M. Nickels 


[916 


6 


72> 


*Springfield (7-8-9) 


P. S. Kingsbury 


[91S 


41 


801 


Spring Valley: 










Hall Township 


Will C. Robb 


[916 


12 


i8s 


Sterling Tp. 


E. T. Austin 


[90s 


15 


293 


Streator Tp. 


W. D. Waldrip ] 


906 


19 


375 


Sullivan Tp. 


T. H. Finley 


[917 


II 


210 


Sycamore 


A. G. Umbreit 


[911 


9 


178 


Taylorville Tp. 


R. G. Beals 


[909 


14 


132 


Tuscola 


J. Kettery 


[908 


10 


iss 


*Urbana (7-8) 


M. L. Flaningam 


[909 


21 


489 


*Watseka (7-8-9) 


C. R. Macdonnell 


[91S 


II 


160 


Waukegan Tp. 


W. G Knoelk 


[906 


21 


431 


West Chicago 


H. H. Kirkpatrick : 


[910 


6 


90 


Wheaton : 










High School 


Ellen M. Gregg 


[908 


12 


215 


Academy 


Wm. F. Rice : 


[911 


5 


65 


*Woodstock (7-8) 


Jessie E. Jewett 


[910 


8 


161 


Total 172 


INDIANA 








Alexandria 


Benton G. Kiecher 


[908 


7 


155 


*Anderson (7-8-9) 


R. R. Cromwell 


1908 


32 


663 


*Attica (8) 


W. F. Mullinix 


[908 


9 


133 


Bedford 


M. J. Abbett 


[908 


17 


346 


*Bloomington (6-7-8) 


E. E. Ramsey 


[910 


26 


434 


Bluff ton 


P. A. Allen 


[916 


12 


267 



NAME OP 
TOWN AND SCHOOL 

*Brazil (7-8-9) 
Bremen 

*Clmton (6-7-8) 
Columbia City 
*Columbus (7-8) 
Connersville : 

*High School (7-8) 

Elmhurst School 
*Crawfordsville (7-8) 
Crown Point 
Culver Militarj^ Acad. 
Decatur 
Delphi 

*East Chicago (7-8-9) 
*Elkhart (7-8) 
Evansville 
Fort Wayne 
^Frankfort (7-8) 
*Franklin (7-8) 
Gary : 

*Emerson (1-12) 

Froebel 
*Goshen (7-8-9) 
Hammond 

*Hartford City (7-8) 
Howe School 
Huntington 
Indianapolis : 

Manual Training 

Shortridge 

Technical 
Jeffersonville 
Kendallville 
*Kokomo 
Lafayette 
La Grange 
La Porte 
Lawrenceburg 
Lebanon 
Ligonier 
Logansport 
*Madison (6A-7-8) 
*Marion (7-8) 
Martinsville 
*Michigan City (7-8) 
Mishawaka 
Monticello 

*Mount Vernon (7-8-9) 
*Muncie (8-9) 
New Albany 
*New Castle (7-8) 
Noblesville 
North Manchester 
Pendleton 
Peru 

Plymouth 
Princeton 
Rensselaer 
*Richmond (7-8) 
Rochester 
Rockport 
*Rushville (7-8) 



OFFICER IN CHARGE DATE OF NUMBER OF HIGH SCHOOE 

(SUPT. ORPRIN.) ACCREDITING TEACHERS ENROELMENT 

Geo. W. McReynolds 1910 19 435 

Orville M. Craig 1915 9 114 

Donald DuShane 1915 11 248 

C. E. Spaulding 1916 10 159 

Samuel Wertz 1915 22 428 



M. S. Hallman 


1908 


16 


302 


Isael Crissler 


1914 


II 


21 


Anna Willson 


1908 


25 


428 


John M Geiser 


1914 


7 


no 


F L. Hunt 


1912 


31 


506 


IVI. F. Worthman 


1910 


II 


174 


C F. Bradshaw 


1916 


10 


243 


Howard H. Clark 


1910 


16 


207 


S. B. McCracken_ 


1906 


28 


553 


John 0. Chewnnig 


1907 


55 


1099 


L. C. Ward 


1906 


52 


961 


Lucian G. Hickman 


1909 


20 


411 


John S. Williams 


1 90S 


15 


249 


E. A. Spaulding 


1908 


25 


388 


C. S. Coons 


1915 


20 


145 


Albert Jeffrey 


1907 


15 


315 


F. D. McElroy 


1908 


29 


556 


M M. Dunbar 


1913 


12 


230 


Wm. Wilson Fisher 


1907 


21 


140 


C. E. Byers 


1909 


21 


409 


E. H. Kemper McComb 


1908 


83 


1522 


George Buck 


1907 


68 


1823 


Milo H. Stuart 


1916 


80 


1776 


Mary K. Voigt 


1910 


15 


287 


P. C. Emmons 


1913 


10 


209 


C. E. Hinshaw 


1908 


28 


612 


Jos. F. Shock 


1908 


2-7 


518 


0. A. Fleming 


1910 


9 


104 


C. E. Harris 


1906 


17 


314 


Jesse W. Riddle 


1910 


9 


159 


L. B. Smelser 


1918 


16 


335 


F. H. Kinney 


191S 


8 


1X4 


John J. Mitchell 


1908 


25 


507 


Homer Long 


1913 


12 


181 


Alva Graves 


1916 


28 


600 


A. L. Treater 


1917 


10 


247 


Milo C. Murray 


1907 


18 


303 


R. W. Johnson 


1909 


15 


267 


Harry E. Elder 


1915 


10 


160 


W. S. Painter 


1909 


14 


255 


L. T. Turpin 


1908 


44 


722 


Chas. B. McLinn 


1915 


22 


358 


G. C. Bronson 


1909 


15 


312 


A. C. Payne 


1909 


14 


240 


Alvin L. Ulrey 


1911 


10 


103 


Geo. B. Routt 


1917 


9 


123 


John W. Kendall 


1909 


IS 


330 


"H. W. Dutter 


1913 


II 


204 


T. W. Stott 


1913 


13 


245 


C. R. Dean 


1908 


13 


229 


T. H. Bentley 


1906 


36 


749 


A. L. Whitmer 


1908 


12 


256 


Chas. E. Skinner 


1915 


8 


no 


J. H. Scholl 


1909 


13 


168 



NAME OF 


OFFICER IN CHARGE 


DATE OE 


NUMBER OE 


HIGH SCH 


TOWN AND SCHOOL 


(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROLEM 


Salem : 










Washington Tp. 


R. E. Cavanaugh 


1917 


II 


244 


Seymour 


Kate Andrews 


1917 


16 


242 


*Shelbyvme (7-8-9) 


M. D. Poland 


1908 


16 


334 


South Bend 


J. S. McCowan 


1906 


56 


1025 


St. Joseph's Col. H. S. 


Ignatius A. Wagner 


I917 


21 


231 


*Sullivan (7-8) 


C. N. Vance 


I9IO 


12 


270 


Terre Haute: 










Garfield 


Thos. W. Records 


I913 


31 


627 


Normal Training 


E. L. Welborn 


I914 


9 


130 


Wiley 


0. E. Connor 


1908 


34 


762 


*Union City (6-7-8) 


H. Greist 


1909 


II 


143 


♦Valparaiso (7-8) 


C. W. Boucher 


1908 


13 


247 


*Vincennes (7-8-9) 


J. W. Foreman 


I915 


27 


392 


Wabash 


M. L. Sandifur 


1909 


IS 


278 


Warsaw 


Jas. M. Lefifell 


1918 


13 


257 


♦Washington (7-8) 


Slater Bartlow, Jr. 


1909 


16 


287 


West Lafayette 


F A. Burtsfield 


I914 


ID 


182 


nVhiting (6-7-8) 


L. C. Grubb 


I9IO 


18 


162 


Winchester 


Oscar H. Baker 


I915 


9 


131 


Total 83 


IOWA 








♦Albia (7-8) 


Harry D. Kies 


I914 


14 


284 


Algona 


J. F. Overmyer 


1906 


II 


235 


Ames 


F. W. Hicks 


I914 


13 


360 


Anamosa 


T. M. Clevenger 


I917 


8 


161 


Audubon 


M. M. Mclntire 


I91O 


9 


168 


Bedford 


J. P. Street 


I915 


9 


170 


Belle Plaine 


G. S. Wooten 


I9I4 


8 


166 


Boone 


C. C. Ball 


I9IO 


15 


484 


Burlington 


G. A. Brown 


1908 


22 


630 


Carroll 


E. T. Housh 


1908 


II 


126 


Cedar Falls: 










High School 


A. H. Speer 


1909 


II 


218 


State Teachers Coll. 


C. W. Stone 


I913 


7 


129 


Cedar Rapids : 










Washington Sch. 


Abbie S. Abbott 


1905 


41 


892 


Centerville 


H. P. Taylor 


1906 


12 


348 


Charles City 


F. T. Vasey 


1908 


16 


312 


♦Cherokee (7-8) 


F. W. Johansen 


1908 


12 


288 


Clarinda 


E. L. Weaver 


1909 


13 


204 


Clarion 


Chas. E. Prall 


I917 


9 


141 


♦Colfax (6-7-8) 


S. A. Potts 


I916 


10 


180 


Corning 


Paul Skorupinski 


I912 


ID 


^7Z 


♦Corydon (7-8) 


J. B. Parker 


1908 


7 


186 


Council Bluffs 


Wm. F. Shirley 


1907 


31 


801 


Cresco 


A. I. Tiss 


1907 


II 


210 


Creston 


Adam Pickett 


1908 


15 


326 


Davenport 


Geo. Edw. Marshall 


1908 


29 


974 


Decorah 


Eva M. Fleming 


1907 


10 


179 


Denison 


C. E. Humphrey 


I9IO 


13 


185 


Des Moines : 










East 


May Goodrell 


1905 


54 


136s 


North 


E. J. Eaton 


I9OS 


41 


822 


West 


Maurice Ricker 


I9OS 


56 


136s 


Dubuque : 










High School 


Fred G. Stevenson 


1906 


24 


561 


Mt. St. Joseph 


Sister Mary Chioma 


I918 


13 


74 


Eagle Grove 


Henry P. Nielsen 


1906 


II 


216 


♦Eldora (7-8-9) 


Will A. Pye 


1917 


12 


171 


Elkader 


L. W. Dunlap 


I912 


9 


169 



NAME OF 


OFFICER IN CHARGE 


DATE OF 


NUMBER OF 


HIGH SCHOOL 


TOWN AND SCHOOL 


(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROLLMENT 


Emmetsburg 


0. S. von Krog 


I915 


II 


124 


Fairfield 


B. F. Nixon 


I912 


19 


340 


Fort Dodge 


W. H. Blakely 


1908 


28 


495 


Fort Madison 


F. A. Welch 


1912 


14 


207 


Grinnell 


S. E. Thompson 


1904 


20 


364 


*Hampton (7-12) 


B. W. Tallman 


1917 


12 


215 


^Independence (7-8) 


T. J. Tormey 


19IO 


IS 


268 


Indianola 


Besse Watson 


191O 


18 


380 


Iowa City 


W. E. Beck 


1900 


29 


534 


Iowa Falls 


Claude F Brown 


I913 


II 


189 


*Keokuk (8) 


R. L. Reid 


1904 


19 


389 


LeMars 


S T. Neveln 


I914 


10 


179 


Logan 


Frank E. Green 


1914 


10 


139 


Lyons 


W. W. Overmyer 


I916 


9 


145 


*Manchester (7-8) 


J. S. Hilliard 


1907 


12 


216 


Maquoketa 


R. M. Stookey 


1906 


12 


185 


Marengo 


C. H. Carson 


1908 


7 


140 


*Marion (7-8) 


0. M. Carson 


I917 


II 


223 


*Marshalltown (8-12) 


Edw. H. Shuey 


1908 


31 


460 


Mason City 


F. M. Hammitt 


I91O 


28 


623 


*Missouri Valley (7-8) 


A. W. Graham 


1908 


8 


200 


*Monticello (5-6-7-8) 


K. D. Miller 


I9IS 


9 


142 


Mt. Pleasant 


C. W. Cruikshank 


I913 


II 


287 


Muscatine 


George C. Wise 


1909 


19 


343 


*Newton (7-8) 


E. T. Cockrell 


1908 


22 


318 


Onawa 


D. D. Carlton 


1908 


ID 


128 


Osage 


Geo. H. Sawyer 


1909 


14 


188 


Oskaloosa : 










High School 


W. H. Kelley 


1908 


23 


391 


Penn Col. Acad. 


Mrs. Jennie Corlett 


1914 


10 


102 


Ottumwa 


W. B. Rice 


1908 


30 


637 


Red Oak 


T. R. Inman 


1918 


16 


339 


Rock Rapids 


W. S. Wilson 


1918 


9 


125 


Sheldon 


E. S. Selle 


I9I3 


13 


172 


Sibley 


J. R. McAnelly 


1914 


7 


100 


Sioux City 


H. A. Bone 


1908 


71 


1346 


Spencer 


E. W. Goetsch 


1909 


14 


245 


*Spirit Lake (6-7-8) 


H. E. Ilsley 


I9IS 


9 


166 


Storm Lake 


C. E. Akers 


1915 


9 


168 


*Vinton (7-10) 


S. F. Browne 


I914 


12 


192 


Willisca 


0. Hamersly 


I916 


9 


187 


Washington 


C. J. Shcmitt 


I916 


18 


306 


Waterloo : 










East 


Fred J. Miller 


I912 


20 


469 


West 


Sloane Wallae 


1 90S 


19 


368 


Webster City 


0. G. Prichard 


I913 


18 


320 


West Liberty 


W. S. Miller 


1907 


ID 


155 


Total 80 


KANSAS 








*Abilene (7-8) 


E. G. Parsons 


IQIO 


15 


334 


Alma 


M. H. Read 


I913 


7 


84 


^Arkansas City (7-8-9) 


J. F. Gilliland 


1909 


20 


376 


Atchison 


J. T. Rosson 


I913 


20 


374 


Baldwin : 










Baker Univ. Acad. 


George B. Manhart 


I9II 


6 


20 


Burlington 


W. S. Rupe 


1912 


10 


228 


*Chanute (7-8-9) 


W. J. Williams 


I91I 


i8- 


330 


Chapman : 










Dickinson Co. H. S. 


W. S Robb 


I9I3 


15 


228 


*Cherryvale (7-8) 


N. A. Baker 


I9I2 


10 


200 



NAME OP 
TOWN AND SCHOOI, 

Clay Center : 

Clay Co. H. S. 
Colby : 

Trego Co. H. S. 
*Concordia (7-8) 
*Dodge City (7-8) 
Effingham : 

Atchison Co. H. S. 
El Dorado 
Ellsworth 
Emporia : 
*High (8-9) 
^Normal (7-8-9) 
Eureka 
Fort Scott 
Garden City 
Garnett 

*Great Bend (7-8) 
*Hays (7-8) 
Herington 
*Hiawatha (7-8) 
*Hoisington (7-8-9) 
*Holton (7-8-9) 
*Horton (7-8-9) 
*Humboldt (7-8) 
*Hutchinson (7-8) 
Independence : 

Montgomery Co. H. S. 
*Iola_(7-8)_ 
Junction City 
Kansas City: 
Argentine 
Central 
Sumner 
Kingman 
Kinsley 

^Lawrence (7-8) 
Leavenworth 
*Manhattan (7-8) 
Mankato 
Marion 
Marysville 
McPherson 
*Minneapolis (6-7-8) 
*Neodesha (7-8-9) 
Newton : 
*High (7-8) 
Bethel Col. Acad 
Nickerson : 

Reno Co. H. S. 
*01athe (7-8) 
Ottawa : 
High 

Ottawa Univ. Acad. 
Peola 

*Parsons (8-9) 
Pittsburg 
Rosedale 
Sabetha 
*Salina (7-8-9) 
Seneca 



OFFICER IN CHARGE 
(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 

E. B. Allbaugh 

Louis Ringwalt 
J. E. Edgerton 
J. H. Clement 

G. W. Salisbury 
J. H. Murphy 
O. J. Silverwood 

R. R. Cook 
W. H. Carothers 
O. R. Farris 
R. H. Hughes 

E. J. Dumond 
C. H. Oman 
A. L. Bell 

C. A. Shively 
E E. Mitchell 

F. R. Aldrich 
R Rankin 

E. W. Leamer 

F. M. Thompson 
C. M. Hilleary 
Geo. F. Brooks 

S. M. Nees 
H. W. Gowans 
C. A. Wagner 

C. T. Rice 
W. A. Bailey 
J. A. Hodge 
W. F. Shaw 

D. A. Baugher 
F. H. Olney 
H. T. Steeper 
F. E. Alder 
W. H. Livers 

W. J. Poundstone 
C. O. Smith 
R. W. Potwin 
C. A. Yeomans 
H. P. Study 

B. F. Martin 
J. W. Kliever 

C. L. Cole 

E. N. Hill 

A. F. Senter 
T. E. Price 
b. C. Graber 
E. R. Stevens 
J. L. Hutchinson 
A. P. Vaughn 
W. E. Nelson 
R H. McWilliams 
R. G. Mueller 



DATE OF NUMBER OF HIGH SCH0OI< 
ACCREDITING TEACHERS ENROEEMENT 



I9II 

I917 
I9IO 
I912 

I9II 
191 1 
I915 

1908 
1916 
I917 
1906 

I913 
I9II 
I912 
I918 
1914 
1909 
I916 
I918 
I914 
I914 
1906 

I91I 
1908 
1906 

I9IS 
1906 

I913 
191 1 

I913 
1906 
1906 
I915 
I916 

I913 
I912 
191 1 
I912 
I913 

191 1 
I913 

191I 
191 1 

I918 
I914 
1908 
I916 
I914 

I915 
I912 
I9IO 
1912 



13 



12 
14 

II 
12 



26 
21 
II 
21 

14 
12 

13 

7 
10 
II 

9 
II 
12 

9 

27 

18 
18 
14 

9 
48 

13 
13 

8 
29 
27 
18 

8 

8 

7 

9 
II 
18 

16 



20 
12 

13 

9 

12 

13 
18 

9 

8 

22 

6 



319 

121 
231 
208 

153 
251 
152 

477 
166 

215 

478 
169 
166 
266 
114 
135 
205 
112 
186 
186 
147 
556 

445 
336 
267 

192 
1259 
293 
247 
158 
589 
473 
435 
165 
124 
164 
197 
182 
223 

364 
127 

219 
207 

349 
68 
220 
333 
427 
135 
160 

499 
113 



NAMi; OF 


OFFICER IN CHARGE 


DATE OF 


NUMBER OF 


HIGH SCE 


TOWN AND SCHOOIv 


(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROIvtM 


Stafford 


M. G. Cleary 


191I 


ID 


158 


Sterling 


R. H. Williams 


19II 


9 


169 


Topeka : 










High 


A. J. Stout 


1906 


50 


II9O 


Bethany Col. Acad. 


Mrs. Alice Worswick 


I917 


5 


40 


Washburn Col. Acad. 


W. C. Wheeler 


191I 


9 


30 


WaKeeney : 










Trego Co. H. S. 


J. H. Niesley 


I912 


7 


113 


Wamego 


C. W. Wheeler 


1917 


8 


145 


Washington 


C. H. Landrum 


I913 


8 


151 


Wellington : 










Sumner Co. H. S. 


A. K. Loomis 


1906 


IS 


3S2 


Wichita 


Tohn Lofty 


1906 


62 


1479 


*Winfield (7-8) 


Will French 


1908 


22 


545 


Total 72 


MICHIGAN 








♦Adrian (7-8-9) 


C. H. Griffey 


1904 


19 


S04 


Albion 


L. W. Fast 


1907 


12 


304 


Alma 


A. F. Schultz 


1912 


10 


2S7 


*Alpena (6-7-8) 


R. D. Ford 


1904 


II 


269 


Ann Arbor 


L S. Forsythe 


1904 


32 


677 


*Battle Creek (7-8) 


H. R. Atkinson 


1904 


35 


945 


Belding 


J A. Langston 


I917 


6 


147 


Benton Harbor 


F A. Jensen 


1906 


IS 


464 


Benzonia Acad. 


G. H. Scott 


I917 


S 


35 


Bessemer 


C. R. Cobb 


1905 


9 


180 


Big Rapids : 










*High School (7-8-9) 


Don Harrington 


1909 


10 


247 


Ferris Inst. 


W. N. Ferris 


I914 


14 


650 


*Birmingham (7-8-9) 


C. Vliet 


I912 


10 


140 


*Boyne City (7-8) 


A. G. Stead 


191 1 


8 


157 


Cadillac 


G. A. McGee 


1907 


12 


334 


Calumet 


A. M. Walworth 


1904 


42 


990 


*Charlevoix (7-8) 


H. A. Craig 


I914 


7 


125 


Charlotte 


C. H. Carrick 


1904 


10 


310 


Cheboygan 


W. L. Barr 


I914 


9 


205 


*Coldwater (7-8) 


T. E. Johnson 


1904 


II 


274 


Croswell 


G. E. Powers 


I916 


5 


163 


^Crystal Falls (7-8) 


W. D. Hill 


1908 


9 


206 


Detroit : 










Cass 


B. F. Comfort 


I916 


1^ 


1580 


Central 


David Mackenzie 


1904 


69 


2132 


Detroit Univ. Sch. 


D. H. Fletcher 


1 90s 


4 


29 


Eastern 


J. R. Bishop 


1904 


S4 


1062 


Ligget 


Miss Ella Liggett 


1909 


20 


200 


Northern 


George Bechtel 


I918 


72. 


2063 


*Northeastern (7-12) 


C. M. Novak 


1918 


S8 


1113 


Northwestern 


E L. Miller 


I915 


76 


1758 


*Nordstrum (7-12) 


G. W. Murdock 


1916 


25 


274 


U. of Det. Prep. 


W. T. Doran 


I917 


16 


376 


Western 


W. A. Morse 


1 90s 


36 


950 


Dollar Bay 


T. R. Davis 


I91O 


9 


III 


Dowagiac 


A. F. Frazee 


1906 


10 


292 


*East Jordan (7-12) 


G. R. Crawford 


I917 


5 


103 


Eaton Rapids 


E. E. Crampton 


I916 


7 


151 


Escanaba 


P. A. Lint 


1909 


18 


397 


Evart 


W. H. Cottrille 


I913 


4 


IIS 


*FIint (7-8-9-10) 


L. S. Parmalee 


I91O 


27 


797 


Fremont 


E. H. Babcock 


I914 


7 


188 


Gladstone 


E. J. Willman 


I9II 


7 


168 


Grand Haven 


Arthur Dondineau 


1909 


II 


259 



NAME OF 
TOWN AND SCHOOI, 

Grand Ledge 
Grand Rapids : 

Calvin College Prep. 

Central 

*South (6-12) 

*Union (7-12) 
*Greenville (7-8) 
Hancock 
Harbor Springs 
Hart 
Hastings 

^Highland Park (7-8-9) 
Hillsdale 
*Holland (7-8) 
Houghton 
*Howell (7-8-9) 
Hudson 
Ionia 

Iron Mountain 
Iron River 
*Ironwood (7-8) 
Ishpeming 
Ithaca 
Jackson 
Kalamazoo : 

*High School (7-8-9) 

Normal High 
Lake Linden 
Lansing 
Lapeer 

*Lowell (7-8-9) 
Ludington 
Manistee 
Manistique 

*Marine City (8-9-10) 
Marshall 
Marquette 
Mason 

*Menominee (7-8-9) 
^Midland (7-8-9) 
*Mt. Clemens (8) 
Mt. Pleasant 
*Munising (7-8) 
Monroe 

*Muskegon (7-8) 
*Negaunee (7-8-9) 
*Nevirberry (7-8) 
Niles 
Norway 

*Ontonagon (7-12) 
*Otsego (7-8) 
*Owosso (8) 
Painesdale 
*Paw Paw (7-8-9) 
*Plymouth (7-8-9) 
*Petoskey (7-12) 
Pontiac 
Portland 
Port Huron 
Reed City 

*River Rouge (7-12) 
-■^Royal Oak (7-8-9) 



OifpICER IN CHARGE 


DATE OF 


NUMBER OF 


HIGH SCHC 


(SUFl' ORPRIN.) 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROEEME 


Jones Sawdon 


I916 


8 


207 


A. J. Rooks 


I914 


16 


365 


J. B. Davis 


1905 


39 


IO91 


P. C. Stetson 


I917 


28 


714 


I. B. Gilbert 


I912 


27 


S29 


A. R. Shigley 


I914 


S 


215 


H. D. Lee 


1904 


II 


227 


J. M. Myron 


I916 


8 


iS8 


F. C. Sherman 


I914 


7 


183 


E. J. Lederle 


1909 


II 


300 


Wm. Prakken 


I914 


?>7 


653 


S. J. Gier 


I91O 


10 


277 


E. E. Fell 


1909 


18 


352 


J. A. Doelle 


1906 


17 


343 


C. V. Courter 


I916 


10 


240 


C. L. Poor 


I914 


7 


173 


A. A. Rather 


1907 


9 


240 


M. B. Travis 


1904 


16 


349 


J. F. Cavanaugh 


1916 


8 


150 


E. T. Duffield 


1909 


24 


432 


C. L. Phelps 


1909 


22 


S02 


I. F. King 


1916 


7 


171 


F. L. BHss 


1 90s 


31 


837 


E. W. Worth 


1904 


34 


76s 


H. Blair 


I917 


4 


14s 


L. P. Holliday 


1909 


7 


167 


C. E. LaFurge 


1904 


Zl 


1030 


E. E. Irwin 


I915 


7 


212 


S. C. Mitchell 


1914 


6 


I3S 


R. H. Mcintosh 


1909 


10 


257 


S. W. Baker 


1905 


IS 


346 


T. W. Clemo 


1907 


ID 


236 


R. Hazelton 


I918 


5 


103 


W. E. Olds 


1904 


ID 


222 


A. R. Watson 


1904 


15 


352 


J. E. Kennedy 


1916 


7 


136 


J. L. Silvernale 


1907 


16 


435 


J. B. Mott 


I912 


10 


201 


A. S. Hudson 


1907 


10 


183 


G. E. Ganiard 


I914 


9 


252 


E. L. Abell 


I916 


7 


108 


E. E. Gallup 


1906 


14 


272 


J. A. Craig 


1904 


28 


643 


Orr Schurtz 


1909 


9 


26S 


L. R. Brink 


1917 


6 


141 


0. W. Haisley 


I918 


ID 


176 


C. J. Borchardt 


1908 


9 


170 


E. W. Mackey 


I912 


S 


95 


C. R. Johnson 


I9a8 


S 


113 


M. W. Longman 


1910 


IS 


390 


F. A. Jeffers 


1914 


9 


190 


0. W. Kaye 


1914 


8 


ISS 


C. F. Reebs 


1016 


6 


159 


J. W. Kelder 


1 90S 


12 


261 


S. M. Dudley 


1905 


23 


524 


A. C. Stitt 


1911 


4 


103 


H. A. Davis 


1 90s 


23 


SOS 


H. G. Warne 


1916 


S 


107 


A. McDonald 


1911 


6 


44 


Fr?ink Hendry 


1917 


ID 


170 



NAME OF 


OFFICER IN CHARGE 


DATE OF 


NUMBER OF 


HIGH SCH 


TOWN AND SCHOOL 


(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROLI^M 


Saginaw : 










East 


H. S. Doolittle 


1904 


2>7 


799 


Arthur Hill 


H. C. Lange 


1904 


16 


445 


*Sault Ste. Marie (7-8) 


G. G. Malcolm 


1909 


22 


304 


*South Haven (7-8) 


T. E. Hook 


1907 


II 


258 


*St. Louis (7-8) 


G. W. McCallum 


I912 


7 


139 


St. Johns 


F. P. Buck 


1907 


8 


190 


*St. Joseph (7-8) 


E. P. Clarke 


1904 


12 


190 


Sturgis 


C. M. Ferner 


I918 


10 


201 


Three Rivers 


F. W. Crawford 


1907 


12 


218 


Traverse City 


G. H. Curtis 


1904 


18 


392 


Wakefield 


J. F. Reed 


I9I4 


5 


88 


Wayne 


T. D. LaRue 


I917 


5 


138 


*Wyandotte (7-12) 


H. C. Daley 


1906 


14 


144 


*Ypsilanti (7-8) 


W. B. Arbaugh 


1909 


15 


367 


Zeeland 


W. L. Fuehrer 


I916 


7 


122 


Total 118 


MINNESOTA 








Albert Lea 


C. C. Baker 


I9IO 


19 


361 


♦Alexandria (7-8) 


F. M. Yockey 


I9IO 


15 


226 


Anoka 


F. H. Koos 


I914 


14 


275 


*Austin (7-8-9) 


H. E. Wheeler 


1903 


25 


404 


*Bemidji (7-8) 


W. G. Bolcom 


I9II 


II 


250 


Biwabik 


J. E. Lunn 


I915 


7 


63 


*Blue Earth (7-8) 


R. A. Hill 


1908 


12 


212 


Brainerd 


W. C. Cobb 


I9II 


16 


285 


Buhl 


M. A. Morse 


I917 


12 


70 


*Canby (7-8-9) 




1909 


9 






151 


Chisholm 


J. P. Vaughan 


I912 


18 


192 


Cloquet 


Peter Olesen 


1907 


14 


295 


Coleraine 


J. A. Vandyke 


I9II 


8 


94 


Duluth : 










Central 


Leonard Young 


1908 


53 


1218 


*R. E. Denfield (7-8-9) 


T. H. Schutte 


I915 


17 


V-Z 


*East Grand Forks (7-8) 


F. E. Lurton 


I9II 


II 


100 


Ely 


H. E. White 


I9IO 


16 


241 


Eveleth 


C. H. Barnes 


1908 


25 


27s 


♦Fairmont (7-8) 


D. S. Brainard 


I9IO 


13 


234 


♦Faribault (7-8-9) 


John Munroe 


1907 


30 


429 


♦Gilbert (4-12) 




I9IO 


13 






143 


Glencoe 


E. M. Mitchell 


1908 


II 


115 


♦Glenwood (7-8) 


Eliza S. Loe 


I917 


8 


145 


♦Grand Rapids (7A-8-9) 


E. A. Freeman 


1907 


16 


206 


Hastings 


Paul R. Spencer 


I9IO 


14 


207 


Hector 


G. W. Wisman 


I9I3 


8 


112 


♦Hibbing (7-8) 


C. C. Alexander 


1909 


23 


398 


♦Hopkins (7-8) 


R. J. Mayo 


I915 


7 


172 


♦Hutchinson (7-8) 


Knowles Wyatt 


1909 


15 


250 


♦Jackson (6-7-8) 


W. 0. Lippitt 


1900 


12 


164 


Lake City 


C. W. Brown 


I912 


12 


186 


Litchfield 


W. W. Hollands 


I9II 


13 


202 


♦Little Falls (7-8-9B) 


F. W. Dobbyn 


1909 


13 


297 


Luverne 


H. C. Bell 


I912 


II 


189 


♦Mankato (7-8-9) 


F. J. Sperry 


1908 


29 


467 


Marshall 


H. H. Nixon 


I912 


II 


163 


Minneapolis : 










Central 


John N. Greer 


1908 


99 


2162 


East 


S. W. Ehrman 


1908 


60 


1 180 


North 


W. W. Hobbs 


1908 


l^^ 


I7S9 


South 


Joseph Jorgens 


1909 


62 


2301 


West 


L. N. McWhorter 


1909 


60 


1602 



NAME OP 


OFFICER IN CHARGE 


DATE OE 


NUMBER OP 


HIGH SCHOOI, 


TOWN AND SCHOOI, 


(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROELMENT" 


University H. S. 


W. S. Miller 


I915 


II 


170 


*Northrop Coll. (8-9) 


Elizabeth Carse 


I918 


17 


75 


Montevideo 


J. J. Bohlander 


1909 


14 


316 


Moorhead 


M. L. Jacobson 


1905 


20 


203 


Morris 


Theodore Utne 


I914 


8 


98 


*New Ulm (7-8) 


H. C. Hess 


1908 


14 


258 


*Northfield (7-8) 


M. P. Fobes 


I9IO 


17 


339 


Owatonna 


W. B. Thornburgh 


I915 


16 


241 


*Park Rapids (7-8) 


A. M. Bank 


I9IS 


ID 


156 


Pipestone 


A. C. Tibbetts 


1912 


9 


171 


*Red Wing (7-8-9) 


0. W. Herr 


19IO 


18 


301 


Redwood Falls 


(Vacant) 


1907 


13 


203 


^Rochester (7-8-9) 


H. A. Johnson 


I915 


2.7 


ZIZ 


St. Cloud 


C. H. Maxson 


1909 


18 


367 


St. Paul: 










Bethel Acad. 


Alfred J. Wingblade 


I917 


6 


119 


Derham Hall 


Sister Antonia 


I917 


21 


150 


Central 


J. E. Marshall 


1906 


71 


1583 


Humboldt 


J. A. Wauchope 


1906 


27 


478 


Johnson 


J. M. Guise 


I91O 


:iZ 


703 


Mechanic Arts 


D. Lange 


I9IO 


45 


950 


St. Peter 


Emily Brown 


I916 


8 


182 


*Sauk Center (7-8-9) 


M. D. Aygarn 


I912 


ID 


198 


Sleepy Eye 


T. E. Lewis 


I914 


8 


86 


South St. Paul 


D. E. Flickey 


I915 


15 


149 


Spring Valley 


G. H. Tracy 


I9II 


12 


170 


^Staples (7-8-9) 


C. E. Young 


I916 


10 


129 


Stillwater 


J. C. Davies 


I9IO 


18 


367 


*Thief River Falls (7-8) 


J. H. Hay 


I91I 


IS 


334 


*Two Harbors (7-8-9) 


C. E. Campton 


1906 


II 


221 


Virginia 


P. P. Colgrove 


I9IO 


25 


371 


Wadena 


L. P. Bunker 


1912 


12 


17a 


Waseca 


S. C. Huffman 


1907 


10 


143 


Wells 


J. W. Petterson 


I91O 


10 


125 


Willmar 


G. A. Foster 


I9IO 


14 


249 


Windom 


E. T. Chestnut 


I9II 


10 


173 


*Winona (8-9) 


J. V. Voorhees 


I9OS 


25 


444 


*Worthington (7-8-9) 


C. A. Patchin 


1900 


II 


206 


Total 78 


MISSOURI 








Bethany 


C. F. Daugherty 


I917 


9 


20S 


Boonville : 










Kemper Mil. Acad. 


A. M. Hitch 


1907 


IS 


255 


Butler 


Alphonso Gorrell 


I912 


10 


257 


Carrollton 


Geo. F. Bush 


1909 


10 


237 


Carthage 


C. W. Oldham 


1908 


18 


443 


Charleston 


Geo. W. Kirk 


I914 


8 


167 


Chillicothe 


A. L. Threlkeld 


I9IO 


14 


292 


Clayton 


K. S. Wright 


I914 


9 


138 


Columbia : 










High 


S. C. Brightman 


1912 


21 


461 


Christian Col. Acad. 


Lucy R. Laws 


I9IO 


II 


57 


Stephens Col. Acad. 


J. M. Wood 


1909 


8 


31 


Ferguson 


W. W. Griffith 


I915 


6 


89 


Frederickstown 


E. 0. Wiley 


I9IO 


8 


142 


Fulton : 










High 


J. T. Bush 


1917 


8 


178 


W. Woods Coll. Acad. 


Martha Reid 


I91S 


14 


85 


*Hannibal (7-8-9) 


R. W. Hibbert 


1909 


14 


221 


Higginsville 


D. W. Branam 


I916 


6 


102 


Independence 


E. B. Street 


I917 


20 


464 



NAME OF 
-TOWN AND SCHOOI, 



OFFICER IN CHARGE 
(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 



DATE OF NUMBER OF HIGH SCHOOI. 
ACCREDITING TEACHERS ENROEEMEXT 



Jefferson City 


G. W. Beswick 


1915 


12 


294 


Joplin 


H. E. Blaine 


1914 


28 


788 


Kansas City : 










Central 


H. H. Holmes 


1909 


56 


1746 


Manual Training 


Porter Graves 


1915 


46 


1136 


Northeast 


Chas. B. Reynolds 


1914 


48 


1336 


Westport 


J. L. Shouse 


1909 


60 


1557 


Lincoln 


J. R. E. Lee 


1907 


22 


594 


Rockhurst Coll. Acad. 


Patrick F. Harvey 


1918 


7 


143 


Kennett 


A. R. Curry 


1913 


5 


73 


Kirksville 


Chas. Banks 


1918 


15 


330 


Kirkwood 


E. H. Beaumer 


1908 


II 


253 


Lebanon 


A. M. Fourt 


1914 


6 


140 


Lexington : 










High 


B. M. Little 


1912 


8 


182 


Central Coll. Acad. 


Z. M. Williams 


1918 


10 


50 


Wentworth Mil. Acad. 


R. K. Latham 


1918 


II 


255 


*Maplewood (7-8) 


Roy S. Dailey 


1911 


II 


190 


Marshall 


R. B. Finley 


1917 


13 


291 


Maryville 


R. M. McGee 


1908 


10 


235 


Mexico : 










McMiUin High 


L. H. Strunk 


1907 


14 


371 


Hardin Coll. Acad. 


John W. Million 


1914 


9 


49 


Mo. Military Acad. 


E. Y. Burton 


1918 


8 


156 


Nevada 


C. E. Stephens 


1915 


13 


289 


Paris 


Reslo Havenor 


1914 


7 


143 


St. Charles: 










Lindenwood Coll. 










Acad. 


Lucinda de Templin 


1914 


20 


62 


St. Joseph: 










Benton 


Vernon Mays 


1916 


12 


215 


Central 


Merl C Prunty 


1908 


40 


775 


St. Louis : 










Central 


Chester B. Curtis 


1908 


62 


1314 


Grover Cleveland 


H. F. Hoch 


1915 


57 


1225 


McKinley 


A. R. Miller 


1908 


58 


1473 


Frank Louis Soldan 


John Rush Powell 


1910 


69 


1716 


Sumner 


Frank L. Williams . 


1911 


36 


925 


Yeatman 


W. M. Butler 


1908 


56 


1168 


Lenox Hall 


Lillian S. Greenleaf 


1915 


18 


87 


Loyola Hall 


Rev. Christopher Kohm 


1918 


6 


116 


The Principia 


Mary K. Morgan 


1915 




143 


Acad. St. Louis U. 


Patrick J. Phillips 


1918 


17 


309 


Savannah 


E. C. Bohon 


1912 


9 


222 


Shelbina 


L. W. King 


1910 


9 


198 


Tarkio 


B. A. Ruberson 


1918 


8 


116 


Trenton 


Eugene S. Briggs 


1914 


II 


318 


Vandalia 


Miles C. Thomas 


1917 


6 


106 


Webb City 


Perry Carmichael 


1913 


15 


391 


Webster Groves 


J. T. Hixon 


1907 


19 


390 


Wellston 


E. F. Bush 


1916 


8 


98 


Total 62 


MONTANA 








Anaconda 


C. P. Utterbach 


1907 


17 


335 


1Big Timber : 










Sweet Grass Co. H. S. 


L. W. Beam 


1914 


9 


126 


Billings 


W. H. McCall 


1910 


24 


512 


Butte 


B. E. Millikin 


191 1 


41 


944 


Bozeman : 










Galletin Co. H. S. 


E. J. Parkin 


1911 


18 


413 


Chinook 


Elizabeth Deckey 


1914 


7 


77 



NAMB OF 


OFFICER IN CHARGE 


DATE OF 


NUMBER OF 


HIGH SCHOOL 


TOWN AND SCHOOI, 


(SUPT. OR PRIN.) 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROLLMENT 


Choteau : 










Teton Co. H. S. 


M. C. Dietrich 


19IS 


6 


81 


Columbus 


E. H. Davis 


1916 


7 


65 


Deer Lodge: 










Powell Co. H. S. 


F. A. Stejer 


1912 


8 


104 


Dillon ; 










Beeverhead Co. H. S. 


B. E. Toan 


1914 


10 


112 


Fort Benton : 










Choteau Co. H. S. 


C. M. Luce 


I916 


9 


74 


Forsythe 


E. C. Bussert 


1915 


8 


86 


Glasgow 


D. S. Williams 


1916 


8 


108 


Glendive : 










Dawson Co. H. S. 


R. L. Hunt 


1913 


II 


126 


Great Falls 


James Rae 


1914 


34 


690 


Hamilton 


H. Schwarm 


1914 


8 


109 


Havre 


Grace M. Easter 


I914 


14 


177 


Helena 


A. J. Roberts 


1910 


26 


397 


Kalispel : 










Flathead Co. H. S. 


F. 0. Randall 


I9II 


23 


510 


Lewistown : 










Fergus Co. H. S. 


F. L. Cummings 


I913 


23 


404 


Livingston : 










Park Co. H. S. 


C. V. Brown 


I914 


14 


271 


Miles City: 










Custer Co. H. S. 


J. A. Delvin 


I914 


12 


216 


Missoula : 










Missoula Co. H. S. 


G. A. Ketcham 


I914 


23 


547 


Philipsburg : 










Granite Co. H. S. 


Chas. Pruner 


I9IS 


6 


75 


Red Lodge: 










Carbon Co. H. S. 


C. W. Thompson 


I915 


9 


187 


Total 25 


NEBRASKA 








Albion 


T. V. Truman 


I91S 


9 


212 


Alliance 


W. R. Pate 


I914 


9 


178 


Alma 


A. F. Wendland 


I917 


6 


112 


Ashland 


R. B. Carey 


I91O 


6 


140 


Auburn 


S E. Clark 


191O 


9 


167 


Aurora 


J. A. Doremus 


1911 


II 


220 


Beatrice 


A. J. Stoddard 


I916 


21 


440 


*Blair (7-8-9) 


W. H. Myers 


1908 


8 


196 


Broken Bow 


W. R. Hull 


19IS 


8 


192 


^Cambridge (5-6-7-8) 


C. L. Littel 


I918 


6 


lOI 


^Central City (6-7-8) 


A. J. Dunlap 


I915 


II 


170 


Chadron 


E. E. Hays 


I918 


5 


41 


Columbus 


R. M. Campbell 


I91O 


14 


294 


Crete 


G. A. Gregory 


I9IO 


7 


161 


David City 


R. R. McGee 


I918 


9 


163 


Exeter 


L. R. Gregory 


I918 


5 


84 


*Fairbury (8-9-10) 


W. H. Morton 


1908 


19 


291 


Fairfield 


W. H. Steinbah 


I915 


5 


108 


Fairmont 


A. J. Hartsook 


1918 


5 


72 


*Falls City (6-7-8) 


B. H. Groves 


1908 


ID 


130 


Franklin Acad 


G. W. Mitchell 


I91O 


5 


67 


*Fremont (7-8) 


A. R. Congdon 


1907 


16 


358 


Friend 


S. M. Dunlap 


I9II 


7 


93 


Fullerton 


W. B. Ireland 


I913 


6 


115 


Geneva 


E. L. Meyer 


I915 


9 


168 


*Gothenburg (7-8-9) 


C. E. Collett 


I917 


7 


139 


Grand Island 


J. F. Matthews 


1909 


17 


390 


Harvard 


R. M. Hanson 


1915 . 


6 


III 



NAME 0? 


OFFICER IN CHARGE 


DATE OE 


NUMBER OF 


HIGH SCE 


TOWN AND SCHOOI, 


(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROLLM 


Hastings : 










High 


J. C. Mitchell 


1906 


^Z 


390 


Academy 


R. B. Crone 


1909 


4 


40 


Havelock 


Frank E. Adams 


1912 


6 


III 


Hebron 


J. H. Dorsey 


1918 


7 


140 


Holdrege 


Dell Gibson 


1909 


ID 


217 


*Huniboldt (8-12) 


D. R. Kuns 


I914 


6 


90 


*Kearney (7-8) 


A. L. Caviness 


1909 


16 


322 


Kimball : 










Kimball Co. 


G. F. Liebendorfer 


I917 


6 


70 


*Lexington (6-7-8) 


Percy A. Adams 


I9IS 


7 


182 


Lincoln : 










High 


Frank G. Pickell 


1905 


69 


1440 


Teachers Coll. H. S. 


Cora B. Hill 


191I 


10 


97 


McCook 


W. T. Davis 


I9IO 


8 


177 


Madison 


P. L. Franklin 


I917 


6 


104 


Minden 


H. W. Wendland 


I915 


9 


209 


Nebraska City 


V/ G. Brooks 


1908 


10 


225 


Neligh 


Jas. V. W. Skinkle 


I918 


6 


135 


Nelson 


John E. Opp 


I917 


5 


88 


^^Norfolk (7-8) 


J. M. Showalter 


1908 


II 


239 


North Bend 


H. R. Partridge 


I917 


6 


85 


*North Platte (7-8-9) 


Wilson Tout 


1909 


II 


183 


Oakland 


E. M. Short 


I918 


6 


96 


Omaha : 










Central 


I. G. Masters 


1 90s 


. 78 


1886 


Benson 


Mary McNamara 


1914 


7 


109 


South 


Edward Huwaldt 


1907 


28 


461 


Brownell Hall 


Euphemia Johnson 


1906 


10 


68 


Creighton Acad. 


R. M. Kelley 


I917 


24 


308 


Ord 


C. S. Jones 


I918 


8 


152 


*Osceola (6-7-8) 


T. F. Duncan 


I918 


6 


124 


*Pawnee City (S-8) 


i. N. Clark 


1909 


8 


182 


Ravenna 


E. W. Lantz 


I915 


5 


109 


Red Cloud 


P. M. Whitehead 


1915 


8 


166 


*Schuyler (7-8-9) 


J. A. True 


I914 


9 


i8S 


Scottsbluff 


C. M. Matheny 


I914 


7 


183 


*Seward (7-8-9) 


R. D. Mortiz 


1909 


8 


166 


*Shelton (7-8) 


C. W. Gwinn 


I913 


5 


95 


Sidney 


W. J. Braham 


I917 


5 


lOI 


Stanton 


W. E. Flake 


I918 


6 


127 


*Superior (8-12) 


A. H. Stalev 


1908 


8 


163 


Tecumseh 


W. S. Cook 


1909 


8 


188 


Tekamah 


A. B. C. Jacobs 


I913 


7 


152 


University Place: 










*High School (6-7-8) 


L. L Frisbie 


I9IO 


II 


233 


Wesleyan Acad. 


J. C. Jensen 


1908 


4 


47 


Wahoo 


C. N. Walton 


I9IO 


7 


200 


Wayne 


A. R. Armstrong 


1917 


6 


99 


West Point 


C. Ray Gates 


I918 


7 


133 


*Wisner (7-12) 


Fred Hayes 


I917 


6 


112 


Wood River 


W. A. Julian 


I918 


5 


94 


York: 










*High (7-8) 


J. B. Crabbe 


1906 


12 


235 


Academy 


Chas. Bisset 


I915 


4 


Z7 


Total ^^ 


NEW MEXICO 








Alburqueque 


G. B. Jones 


I917 


15 


351 


Carlsbad 


G. E. Brinton 


I917 


8 


130 


Deming : 










Luna Co. H. S. 




IO18 


8 


118 



NAME OF 
TOWN AND SCHOOIv 

East Las Vegas: 

High School 

Normal Univ. Prep. 
Las Cruces 
Raton : 

Colfax Co. H. S. 
Roswell : 

High School 

N. M. Mil. Inst. 
*Fanta Fe (7-8) 
Silver City: 

N. M. Nor. Prep. 
State College: 

Agric. Coll. Prep. 

Total 12 



OFFICER IN CHARGE 
(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 

W. B. McFarland 
F. H. Roberts 

D. F. R. Rice 

A. R. Kent 

J. W. Riley 
J. W. Willson 

E. J. Roth 

E. L. Enloe 
A. D. Crile 



DATE OF NUMBER OF HIGH SCHOOIv 
ACCREDITING TEACHERS ENROI,LMENT 



I918 
1917 
I918 

1918 

I918 

I917 
I917 

I917 
1917 



5 

13 



13 
14 

7 
10 
18 



57 

151 

87 

210 

310 

226 

n 
130 

150 



*Beach : 

State Agr. H. S. (7-8) 
*Bismarck (7-8) 
*Bottineau (7-8-9) 
Cando 
Carrington : 

State Agr. H. S. 
Casselton 
Cavalier 
Cooperstown 
*Devils Lake (7-8) 
Dickinson 
*Edgeley (7-8) 
*Ender!ing (8) 
Fargo : 

*High School (7-8-9) 

Agr. & Man. Tr. H. S. 
Grafton : 

*State Agr. H.S. (7-8) 
Grand Forks 
Hankinson 
Hope 

*Jamestown (7-8-9) 
*Kenmare (7-8) 
*Lakota (7-8) 
LaMoure : 

*State Agr. H. 8.(7-8) 
*Langdon (7-8-9) 
Larimore 
Lisbon 
Mandan 
Mayville 
*Minot (6-7-8) 
Jamestown 
New Rockford 
*0akes_(8) 
Park River 
Rugby 
University : 

Model H. S. 

Valley City 
*Wahpeton (7-8) 
*Williston (7-8-9B) 

Total .-^6 



NORTH DAKOTA 



R. M. Lewis 
J. M. Martin 
L. H. Darling 
G. J. Leufgren 

A. L. Schafer 
A. E. Robinson 
H. H, Kirk 
S. B. Erickson 
Nelson Sauvain 
P. S. Berg 
Emmett McKenna 
T. O. Sweetland 

Arthur Deamer 
E. F. Ladd 

R. B. Murphy 
J. Nelson Kelly 
Robert E. Smith 
A. P. Weaver 
N. C. Koontz 
W. A. Godward 
J. E. Bjorlie 

John A. Johnson 
E. L. Kuhnes 
L. A. Herdle 
W. B. Simcox 
C. L. Love 
Oscar Erickson 
Bruce Francis 
N. C. Koontz 
J H. Colton 
C E. Blume 
Wm. Davenport 
I. T. Simley 

C. C. Schmidt 
G. W. Hanna 
Martha T. Fulton 
L. A. White 



914 
912 
911 
910 

911 

913 
915 
915 
908 
911 
915 



907 

914 



907 
918 

913 
908 
910 
911 

913 
913 
912 
912 

913 
918 
910 
908 
914 
916 
912 
91S 

912 
910 
910 
911 



9 
13 



9 

7 

6 

7 

II 

II 



27 



12 

27 

7 

7 

14 



II 

6 

15 

14 



12 
14 



80 

225 

121 

94 

104 

81 

82 

103 

191 

139 

78 

87 

478 
114 

198 

522 

74 

57 

173 

no 

81 



121 

66 

103 

134 
88 

258 

98 

84 

118 

106 

90 

199 

I2S 
199 



OHIO 



NAME Of 


OFFICER IN CHARGE 


DATE OE 


NUMBER OF 


HIGH SCH 


TOWN AND SCHOOL 


(SUPT. ORPEIN.) 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROELM 


Akron : 










Central 


L. W. MacKinnon 


1906 


40 


903 


South 


C. J. Bowman 


I91I 


36 


764 


West 


E. L. Marting 


I914 


34 


675 


Alliance 


J. E. Vaughan 


I912 


29 


699 


Amherst 


J. E. Porter 


I916 


9 


140 


Ashland 


R. D. Richards 


1907 


17 


345 


*Ashtabula (7-8) 


H. C. Dieterich 


1905 


21 


573 


*Ashtabula Harbor (7-9) 


W. E. Wenner 


I912 


15 


154 


Athens : 










High School 


G. F. Morgan 


I918 


15 


282 


Jno. Hancock Sch. 


W. E. McVey 


1918 


16 


99 


Barberton 


W. L. Light 


I912 


17 


143 


Bellaire 


Charles S. McVay 


191 1 


18 


430 


Bellefontaine 


R. J. Kiefer 


1904 


II 


276 


*Bellevue (7-8) 


Charles C. Garman 


1907 


12 


258 


*Berea (7-8-9) 


H. B. Alberty 


1914 


6 


115 


Bluffton 


C. C. Nardin 


I912 


8 


178 


Bowling Green 


W. F. Starkey 


1909 


18 


351 


Bridgeport 


S. A. Gillette 


I916 


8 


146 


Bryan 


T. W. Wyandt 


1907 


10 


242 


*Bucyrus (8) 


W. W. Borden 


1907 


14 


381 


Canton 


J. L. G. Pottorf 


1909 


43 


1121 


Canal Winchester 


N. B. Nunemaker 


1916 


4 


98 


Celina 


J. W. Pogue 


I912 


10 


160 


Chardon 


Perrv A. Harrington 


19II 


8 


142 


Chicago Jc. 


W. C. Kramer 


I914 


7 


130 


Chillicothe 


F. J. Prout 


1905 


16 


379 


Cincinnati : 










Acad. Sacred Heart 


(Mme.) M. T. O'Loane 1918 


8 


36 


Franklin Sch. 


G. S. Svkes 


1905 


4 


2,2 


Hartwell 


Arthur Powell 


1909 


4 


63 


Hughes 


E. D. Lvon 


1904 


81 


20/5 


*Madisonville (7-12) 


C. J. Brooks 


1912 


IS 


302 


Pleasant Ridge 


Thomas L. Simmermon 1915 


9 


116 


St. Xavier Sch. 


Rev Albert J. Fox 


I917 


21 


376 


University Sch. 


W. E. Stillwell 


1907 


II 


56 


Walnut Hills 


Atley S. Henshaw 


1907 


25 


562 


Woodward 


C. M. Merry 


1904 


85 


1629 


Circleville 


W. T. Trump 


1907 


II 


220 


Cleveland : 










*Central (7-8) 


Edward L. Harris 


1904 


45 


I06I 


East 


Daniel W. I-othman 


1909 


42 


1051 


East Tech. 


Charles H. Lake 


I912 


102 


2077 


Glenville 


H. H. Cully 


1905 


40 


1905 


*Lincoln (7-8) 


Tames B. Smile}'- 


1906 


28 


549 


South 


I. F. Patterson 


1905 


2t 


538 


West 


David P. Simpson 


1905 


28 


648 


West Tech. 


E. W. Boshart 


I914 


52 


888 


*Univ. Sch. (7-12) 


Harry A. Peters 


1908 


18 


318 


Loyola Sch. 


Rev. F. A. McKernan 


1918 


7 


144 


St. Ignatius Sch. 


Rev. Thomas J. Smith 


I I918 


12 


250 


*Cleveland Heights (8-9) 


T. W. McLane 


1909 


17 


279 


*Colnmbiana (7-8) 


R. F. McMullen 


I915 


7 


108 


Columbus : 










Acad. Capitol Univ. 


R. V. Schmitt 


I916 


9 


75 


East 


W. B. Skimming 


1906 


35 


756 


North 


Chas. D. Everett 


1 906 


43 


1000 


South 


Chas. S. Barrett 


1907 


25 


480 


West 


Otto H. Magly 


I912 


20 


434 



NAMTi OF 
TOWN AND SCHOOIv 

St. Mary's Acad. 
Conneaut 
Coshocton 
Covington 
Crestline 
Cuyahoga Falls 
Danville-Buckeye 
Dayton : 

Steele 

Stivers Man. Tr. 

St. Mary Coll. Acad. 
Defiance 
De Graff 
Delaware 
Delphos 
Dennison 
Dover 

E. Cleveland 
E. Liverpool 
*Eaton (7-8) 
Elyria 
Findlay 
Fostoria 

*Fremont (7-8-g) 
Gallon 

*GaIlipolis (7-8-9) 
Geneva 
Gibsonburg 
Girard 

Grandview Hts. 
Granville : 

Doane Acad. 
Greenfield 
Greenville 
Hamilton 
Hillsboro 
Huron 
Tronton 
T ark son 
Tefferson 
Kent : 

High School 

Normal H. S. 
Kenton 
Lakewood 
Lancaster 
*Leroy (7-8) 
Lima 
Lisbon 

*Lockland (7-8) 
Logan 

*London (6-7-8) 
Lorain 
Mansfield 
Marietta 
Marion 

Martin's Ferry 
Marysville 
Massillon 
Mechanicsburg 
Medina 
*Miamisburg (7-8) 



OFFICER IN CHARGE DATE OF NUMBER OF HIGH SCHOOI, 

(SUPT. ORPRIN.) ACCREDITING TEACHERS ENROLLMENT 

Sister M. B. Gloninger 1918 12 61 

E. D. Williamson 1907 15 306 

C. E. Bryant 1912 16 306 

C. H. Dettling 1914 7 118 

A. G. Welsheimer 1915 9 141 

W. H. Richardson 1913 8 184 

J. A. Gerverich 1915 4 32 



J. H. Painter 


1905 


41 


935 


W. H. Meek 


1911 


40 


796 


Rev. B. P. O'Reilly 


1910 


28 


320 


E. W. Howie 


1911 


12 


272 


S. A. Frampton 


1917 


7 


91 


H. T. Main 


1904 


16 


366 


Hugh R. Hick 


1912 


8 


158 


W. H. Angel 


1913 


7 


124 


J. C. Stiers 


1907 


12 


242 


W. H. Kirk 


1911 


Zl 


697 


F. P. Geiger 


1903 


22 


595 


John O'Leary 


1908 


7 


123 


F. M. Shelton 


1904 


26 


601 


L F. Matteson 


1906 


15 


594 


F. H. Warren 


1911 


12 


322 


F. P. Timmons 


1907 


16 


423 


L J. Phillips 


1908 


II 


250 


0. B. Clifton 


1905 


8 


i6s 


Cleon E. Webb 


1909 


10 


151 


0. L. Kavlor 


1916 


5 


125 


H. L. Cash 


1914 


5 


100 


C. A. Waltz 


1915 


6 


84 


H. R. Hundley 


1909 


9 


93 


F. R. Harris 


1905 


II 


189 


Minor McCool 


1907 


17 


Z7i 


H. R. Townsend 


1904 


26 


645 


Pearce McMullen 


1904 


II 


217 


H. E. Dewey 


1918 


5 


95 


Chas. E. McCorkle 


1908 


16 


350 


J. E. Kinnison 


1911 


6 


179 


G. M. McCommon 


1912 


6 


126 


F. B. Bryant 


1912 


10 


134 


Chas. F. Koehler 


1918 


10 


89 


N. E. Hutchinson 


1910 


II 


279 


H. W. Kennedy 


1905 


34 


707 


J. R. Clements 


1904 


21 


419 


R. F. Howe 


1915 


8 


49 


L E. Collins 


1907 


Z^ 


907 


W. H. Geiger 


1910 


6 


158 


C. F. Sharp 


1903 


9 


177 


L. L Morse 


1913 


8 


245 


W. H. Rice 


1907 


8 


178 


D. J. Boone 


1906 


26 


604 


G A. Davis 


1906 


26 


748 


B. 0. Skinner 


1904 


28 


540 


K. H. Marshall 


1903 


25 


530 


W. A. Walls 


1907 


15 


351 


L B. Hughes 


190S 


7 


154 


L. E. York 


1904 


24 


498 


Bert Highlands 


1916 


5 


112 


W E. Conkle 


1908 


9 


230 


Harris V. Bear 


1909 


8 


197 



NAME OF 
TOWN AND SCHOOI, 

Middletown 

Mingo Jet. 

Minster 

Mt. Sterling 

Mt. Vernon 

Napoleon 

Nelsonville 

Newark 

New Bremen 

New Concord 

New Lexington 

New Philadelphia 

Niles 

*North Baltimore (7-8) 

Norwalk 

Norwood 

Oak Harbor 

Oberlin 

Orrville 

Oxford: 

*Wm. McGuffey Sch. 
(7-12) 
*Pamesville (7-8) 
Pandora : 

Riley Tp. 
*Paulding (7-8-9) 
Perrysburg 
Piqua 
Plain City 
Pomeroy 

*Port Clinton (7-8) 
Portsmouth 
Ravenna 
Rio Grande: 

Raccoon Tp. 
*Salem (7-8) 
Sandusky 

*Shaker H'ghts (7-8) 
Shelby 
Springfield 
Steuben ville 
St. Clairville 
St. Mary's 
Tiffin 

Tippecanoe City 
Toledo : 

Scott 

*Smead (7-12) 

St. Johns 

Waite 
Toronto 
*Troy (7-8) 
Urichsville 
Upper Sandusky 
Urbana : 

High School 

University School 
Van Vv''ert 
Wadsworth 
Wapakoneta 
* Warren (7-8-9) 



OFFICER IN CHARGE 
(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 



DATE OF NUMBER OF HIGH SCHOOIv 
ACCREDITING TEACHERS ENROI,I.MENT 



K. W. Solomon 


1907 


22 


522 


F. Linton 


1915 


9 


81 


John C. Halsema 


1916 


5 


77 


R. H. Nichols 


1914 


5 


97 


P. C. Zemer 


1905 


19 


493 


E. H. Brown 


1914 


9 


231 


E, R. Rike 


1912 


9 


303 


Wilson Hawkins 


1908 


28 


758 


C. T. Fogle 


1913 


6 


120 


J. G. Lowery 


1908 


9 


162 


J. E. Hay 


1918 


9 


179 


Chas. F. Limbach 


1908 


29 


326 


W. C. Campbell 


1910 


21 


359 


J. 0. Grimes 


1916 


5 


123 


C. C. Patterson 


1906 


14 


323 


W. W. Maclntyre 


1906 


20 


441 


Geo. F. Ashbacher 


1915 


7 


164 


Howard L. Rawdon 


1907 


12 


268 


M. C. Avery 


1914 


8 


146 


J. W. Heckert 


1916 


4 


92 


C. C. Underwood 


1905 


12 


ZZ7 


Geo. A. Euf 


1914 


5 


114 


Carl G. Pemberton 


1918 


6 


133 


J. A. Nietz 


1918 


5 


80 


B. R. Ellabarger 


1907 


18 


360 


G. R. Warman 


1918 


5 


6S 


C. T. Coates 


1912 


ID 


166 


C. M. Carrick 


1914 


8 


i6s 


Clark Fullerton 


1904 


23 


540 


E. 0. Trescott 


1906 


II 


152 


E. W. Edwards 


1914 


5 


95 


J. S. Allan 


1905 


14 


360 


W. S. Edmund 


1904 


25 


610 


Alfred S. Meese 


1918 


9 


60 


W H. Maurer 


1904 


7 


214 


E. W. Tiffany 


1904 


38 


1155 


Robt. L. Ervin 


1903 


20 


487 


W. A. Langg 


1917 


7 


142 


C. C. McBroom 


1907 


10 


228 


H. H. Frazier 


1904 


17 




R. W. Crist 


191S 


9 


127 


Ralph H. Demorest 


1914 


56 


1747 


Rose Anderson 


1908 


7 


41 


Rev F. P. Kemper 


1918 


IS 


279 


Chas. W. Gayman 


1914 


52 


1346 


S. C. Dennis 


1918 


5 


117 


Chas. W. Cookson 


1904 


IS 


250 


L. E. Everett 


1909 


II 


299 


E. L. Porter 


1909 


8 


180 


L N. Kevser 


-1904 


8 


180 


Carroll H. May 


1918 


6 


ZZ 


D. B. Clark 


1903 


14 


378 


A. W. Eliot 


1913 


9 


I8S 


F. E. Reynolds 


1908 


12 


329 


R. H. Allison 


1904 


20 


370 



NAME 01? 
TOWN AND SCHOOI, 

Washington C. H. 
Wauseon 
Wellston 
Wellsville 
Westerville 
West Jefferson 
*Willoughby (7-8) 
Wilmington 
Wooster 
Wyoming 
*Xenia (7-8) 
Youngstown : 

Rayen 

South 
Zanesville 

Total 183 



Ardmore 
Bartlesville 
*Blackwell (7-8) 
*Bristow (7-8) 
Chickasha : 

*High School (7-8) 

Acad Ok. Col. Women 
*Cleveland (7-8) 
CoUinsville 
Cordell 
Gushing 
Dewey 
Drumright 
Enid: 

High School 

Phillips Univ. Acad. 
Guthrie 
Henryetta 
Hugo 
Jenks 
Lawton 
Mangum 
McAlester 

*Muskogee (7A-8-9) 
Oklahoma Gity 
Okmulgee 

*Ponca Gity (7-8-9) 
Pryor 
Sapulpa 
Shawnee 
*Tulsa (7-8-9) 
Vinita 
Woodward 

Total 31 



*Aberdeen (8) 

*Armour (8) 

Belle Fourche 

♦Brookings (7-8) 

Ganton 

Glark 

Deadwood 



OFFICER IN charge; 

(SUPT. OR PRIN.) 

O. K. Probasco 
M. L. Allstetter 
S. G. Maharry 
A. D. Horton 
L. W. Warson 

F. W. Stoker 
E. M. Otis 
E. P. West 

G. G. Maurer 
G. S. Fay 
John R. Patterson 

E. F. Miller 
G. E. Reed 

F. G. Kirkendall 

OKLAHOMA 

G. W. Richards 

F. W. Wenner 
A. J. Lovett 

C. E. Hutton 

W. F. Ramey 

G. W. Austin 

D. P. Trent 
L. H. Petit 

H. T. Flaugher 
J. D. Barney 
T. H. Robinson 
W. G. French 

DeWitt Waller 
W. L. E. Shane 
A. E. Wickizer 
J. T. Heflev 
H. G. Bennett 
N. B. Henry 
H. A. Garroll 
M. P. Smith 
R. L. McPheron 
R. F. Hannum 
W. O. Moore 
S. H. Wood 
T. N. Hamilton 
T. G. Mitchell 
E. B. Gardner 
G. W. Gethmann 
E. V. Tubbs 
C. N. Peak 
G. G. Wakefield 



date oif 


NUMBER OE 


HIGH SCHOOI, 


accrediting 


TEACHERS 


ENROLLMENT 


I9IO 


II 


275 


1908 


9 


215 


1905 


6 


169 


1905 


9 


224 


I9I3 


8 


197 


I9I3 


5 


lOI 


1904 


7 


132 


I9I3 


9 


236 


1904 


17 


348 


1907 


8 


64 


I90S 


13 


296 


1909 


34 


793 


I9I3 


35 


829 


1906 


24 


609 


I9I8 


12 


372 


I9I2 


12 


24s 


I9I2 


13 


320 



I9I8 

I9I2 

I9I8 
I9I8 
I9I8 
I9I8 
I9I8 
I9I8 
I9I8 

I9II 
I9I2 
I9I2 

I9I7 
I9I3 
I9I8 
I9I4 
.1918 

191 1 
I9II 
I9IO 

I9I4 
I9I8 
I9I7 
I9I2 
I9I6 
191 1 
I9I3 
I9I8 



SOUTH DAKOTA 

Garl M. Baird 1907 

J. E. Johnson 1915 

J. F. Pinkerton 1916 

S. E. Hargis 1907 

G. G. Lawrence 1912 

T. B. Heinmiller 1915 

H. Nienhixis 1914 



13 
9 

5 
7 
7 
9 
7 
12 



13 
II 
10 

5 

12 
12 
16 

35 
70 
II 



12 

28 

46 

9 

9 



20 

7 

6 

12 

7 
7 



130 

297 
190 
82 

83 
176 
155 
115 
130 

635 
168 

317 
162 
202 

41 
278 
290 
315 
637 
1729 
224 
202 

151 
212 

523 
792 
182 
205 



328 

n 
93 

235 

no 
107 
123 



NAME 0? 


OFFICER IN CHARGE 


DATE OF 


NUMBER OF 


HIGH SCHOOI. 


TOWN AND SCHOOL 


(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROLIvMENT 


Elk Point 


Jonas Leyman 


I918 


6 


103 


Flandreau 


J. V. Ernst 


I917 


7 


142 


Groton 


G W. Crossmann 


I916 


6 


72 


Hot Springs 


J. W. Browning 


I917 


7 


121 


*Huron (7-8) 


F. L. Whitney 


1909 


13 


293 


Lead 


F. A. Henderson 


1905 


16 


222 


*Madison (7-8-9) 


S. T. May 


I9IO 


13 


256 


Milbank 


H. C. Souder 


I9IS 


7 


116 


Miller 


C. L. Fairchild 


I9I4 


7 


83 


Mitchell 


J. C. Lindsey 


1906 


18 


379 


Pierre 


M. C. Helm 


1909 


9 


151 


*Rapid City (7-8) 


Robert B. Irons 


I9II 


16 


227 


Redfield 


J. E. Martin 


I9IO 


19 


i6s 


Sioux Falls 


W. L Early 


1906 


29 


564 


*Vermillion (8) 


J. W. Shideler 


1907 


13 


199 


Watertown 


B. B. Newman 


1906 


18 


309 


Webster 


Herbert P. Ide 


1907 


8 


124 


Yankton 


T. A. Harmon 


1903 


14 


214 


Total 25 


WISCONSIN 








Antigo 


E. F. Merbach 


1908 


16 


373 


Appleton 


Paul G. W. Keller 


1903 


27 


521 


Ashland • 


J. E. Thompson 


1908 


23 


445 


Baraboo 


A. C. Kingsford 


1908 


13 


285 


Beaver Dam : 










High School 


Geo. R. Ray 


1508 


14 


185 


Wayland Acad. 


E P. Brown 


1904 


12 


90 


Beloit 


J. H. McNeel 


1903 


27 


760 


Berlin 


F. Stanley Powles 


1908 


9 


155 


Burlington 


Fred L. Witter 


1908 


II 


175 


Chilton 


G. M. Morrissey 


I917 


8 


122 


*Chippewa Falls (7-8) 


A. G. Findlay 


1908 


18 


3S0 


Columbus 


John Dixon 


1908 


10 


159 


Delafield : 










St. John's Mil. Acad. 


H H. Holt 


I9IO 


16 


345 


Delavan 


H A. Melcher 


1909 


7 


148 


Dodgeville 


Geo. Haver son 


I914 


8 


154 


Durand 


L. U. St. Peter 


I918 


7 


129 


Eau Claire 


L. A. Bu Dahn 


1904 


35 


594 


*Edgerton (7-8-9) 


F. 0. Holt 


I912 


9 


193 


Elkhorn 


Chas. A. Jahr 


1908 


7 


144 


Ellsworth 


L. W. Fulton 


I9I2 


7 


146 


Elroy 


J. S. Pitts 


I914 


5 


97 


*Evansville (7-8) 


J. F. Waddell 


1909 


8 


152 


Fennimore 


F. E. Drescher 


I9I2 


8 


121 


Florence 


L. A. Jones 


I918 


8 


99 


Fond du Lac 


E. J. Wilson 


1904 


24 


620 


Fort Atkinson 


Wakelin McNeel 


I912 


10 


203 


Grand Rapids 


C. W. Schwede 


1900 


22 


388 


Green Bay: 










East 


W. T. Ream 


1906 


20 


484 


West 


C. F. Cole 


I9II 


19 


396 


Hartford 


C. H. Karch 


1907 


10 


163 


Hudson 


I. 0. Hubbard 


I912 


9 


176 


LIurley 


J. E. Murphy 


I91S 


9 


125 


Janesville 


G. A. Bassford 


1908 


24 


524 


Jefferson 


W^ G. Ballentine 


I917 


II 


134 


Kaukauna 


I/eo. G. Schussmann 


1908 


II 


i6s 


*Kenosha (7-8-9) 


G. N. Tremper 


1908 


20 


392 


Kewaunee 


R. J. McMahon 


I918 


9 


143 



NAME Of 
TOWN AND SCHOOL 

La Crosse 
Ladysmith 
Lake Geneva: 

High School 

N'western Mil. Acad. 
Lake Mills 
Lancaster 
Lodi 
Madison : 

*High School (7-8-9) 

*Wis. High Sch.(7-I2) 
*Manitowoc (7-8-9) 
Marinette 
Marshfield 
Medford 
Menasha 
Menomonie 
Merrill 
Milwaukee : 

East 

North 

South 

Washington 

West 

*Downer Sem. (7-8) 
Mineral Point 
Mondovi 
*Monroe (7-8-9) 
Neenah 
Neillsville 

*New London (7-8-9) 
New Richmond 
Oconomowoc 
Oconto 
Oshkosh 
Park Falls 
Platteville 
Plymouth 
*Portage (7-8) 
Port Washington 
Prairie du Chien 
Racine : 

High School 

*ColI. Gram. Sch. 
Reedburg 

*Rhinelander (7-8) 
*Rice Lake (7-8) 
*Richland Center (7-8) 
*Ripon (7-8-9) 
*River Falls (7-8) 
Sheboygan 
Sinsinawa : 

St. Clara Acad. 
*South Milwaukee (7-8) 
Sparta 
Stanley 
Stevens Point 
*Stoughton (7-8) 
Sturgeon Bay 
Superior : 

Central 

Nelson Dewey 



OFFICER IN CHARGE 
(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 

Sam E. Tift 
L. F. Rahr 



DATE OF NUMBER OF HIGH SCHOOt 
ACCREDITING TEACHERS ENROLLMENT 
1908 43 940 

I918 9 163 



Mrs. Marietta b. Bake 


r 1911 


IL H. Rogers 


1908 


Florence A. Dodge 


1917 


R. W. Adams 


1908 


A. J. Hcnkel 


1908 


Voyta Wrabetz 


1908 


H. L. Miller 


1908 


C. G Stangel 


1908 


F. W. Han ft 


1900 


Don S. Miller 


1908 


E. G. Toan 


1 90S 


John Callahan 


1908 


C. F. Hanske 


1908 


E. D. Miner 


1908 


G. A. Chamberlain 


1904 


R. E. Krug 


1908 


H. E. Coblentz 


1904 


Geo J. Baker 


1915 


A. C. Shong 


1904 


Ellen C. Sabin 


1904 


W. R. Rood 


1914 


C. W. Dodge 


1915 


P. F. JSTeverman 


1908 


C. F. Hedges 


1908 


T. E. Henderson 


1908 


W. S. Ford 


1912 


Robert Lohrie 


1912 


A. L. Halvorson 


1908 


E. F. Strong 


1908 


A. B. O'Neil 


1904 


E. C. Hirsch 


1916 


A. L. Tarrell 


1912 


C. A. Rubado 


190S 


C. C. Bishop 


1907 


C. H. Bachhuber 


191S 


N. Gunderson 


1918 


L. W. Brooks 


1908 


B. T. Rogers 


1908 


A. B. Olson 


1908 


W, P. Colburn 


1908 


H. J. Steeps 


1910 


J. P. Ballantyne 


1912 


C. B. Johnson 


1908 


Anna F. Williams 


1905 


Wm. Urban 


1906 


Sister Mary James 


1912 


F. W. Hein 


1908 


F. C. Bray 


1913 


G. A. Stenerson 


1912 


T. S. Murrish 


1908 


C J. Anderson 


1907 


R. Soukup 


1904 


C. J. Wade 


1904 


A. T. Conrad 


1904 



II 

9 

6 

12 

6 



61 
26 
19 
19 
II 
8 
II 
21 
14 

43 

42 

39 
31 
47 
22 
ID 

8 

13 
II 

ID 
II 
13 
9 
II 

34 

7 

18 

13 
10 

7 
9 

47 
14 
II 
12 
12 
12 

9 
ID 

28 

17 
10 
12 
II 

14 
16 
II 

34 
II 



207 
132 
127 
171 

lOI 

1 109 
296 
445 
465 
233 
181 
163 
274 
325 

1048 
1036 

955 

759 

1082 

177 
186 
149 

271 

i6s 
152 
319 
177 
222 
886 
118 

139 
260 
22s 
116 
130 

156 
64 
203 
287 
204 
248 
178 
150 
553 

81 
124 
232 

215 
320 
360 
252 

779 
169 



NAME OF 


OFFICER IN CHARGE 


DATE OF 


NUMBER OF 


HIGH SCHOOL 


TOWN AND SCHOOL 


(SUPT. ORPRIN.) 


ACCREDITING 


TEACHERS 


ENROLLMENT 


Tomah 


F. M. Bray 


I916 


12 


248 


Tomahawk 


H. F. Schell 


1916 


8 


125 


Viroqua 


Roy L. Heindel 


I916 


9 


213 


Washburn 


G. D. Kyper 


1908 


II 


240 


Watertown 


T. J. Berto 


I914 


12 


321 


Waukesha 


G. F. Loom is 


1904 


17 


391 


Waupaca 


E. H Miles 


1908 


10 


229 


Waupun 


L. F. Smith 


1912 


9 


127 


Wausau 


I. C. Fainter 


1904 


28 


527 


Wauwatosa 


P. A. Kolb 


1906 


10 


160 


West Allis 


G. A. German 


I9IO 


15 


260 


West Bend 


D. E. McLane 


I912 


8 


138 


Whitewater 


C. W. Rittenburg 


1908 


8 


133 


Total io6 


WYOMING 








Buffalo : 










Johnson Co. 


John T. Hawkes 


1918 


6 


125 


*Casper (7-8) 


George Wilder 


I91S 


13 


161 


Cheyenne 


A. S. Jessup 


I912 


15 


252 


Evanston 


Geo. H. Coverdale 


I918 


8 


1 10 


Laramie : 










*High School (7-8) 


C. E. Eddleblute 


I913 


12 


141 


Univ High 


A. C. Cross 


I917 


14 


55 


*Rock Springs (7-8) 


0. F. Munson 


I916 


7 


139 


Sheridan 


J. J. Marshall 


1912 


18 


362 


Total 8 











JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOLS IN THE NORTH CENTRAL ASSOCIATION 
TERRITORY, 1917-1918.* 

For the last two or three years it has been the policy of the North Central Asso- 
ciation of Colleges and Secondary Schools to make a scientific study of some one or 
more special problems connected with secondary education in its territory. The pres- 
ent year the topic was Junior High Schools. 

To secure data a questionnaire was sent to each North Central Secondary School 
which was on the accredited list last year, and to such nev/ schools as were thought 
eligible this year. The questionnaire was made a part of the required report of every 
school, and since a standard of the Association reads : "No school shall be consid- 
ered (for accrediting) unless the regular annual blank furnished for the purpose shall 
have been filled out and placed on file with the inspector", it may be fairly assumed 
that replies were received from all schools having a Junior High School organization. 
Moreover, the questionnaire was so worded as to call for a reply from all schools 
which had any modified form of the eight-four plan, irrespective of the name given 
to such modified form. 

Last year 1165 secondary schools were accredited by the Association. Of this 
number, and including a few new schools, 293 this year made returns on the Junior 
High School, or its assumed equivalent. It may be concluded, therefore, that this is, 
approximately at least, the total number of such schools in the North Central terri- 
tory today.^ 

The accompanying table gives the summary of the replies to the questionnaire. 

The following constitute the more significant items and deductions from the table. 



* Since the report was made up 17 additional reports have been received, bringing 
the membership up to 310. These are found as follows: Detroit 2, Cleveland 6, Co- 
lumbus 2, other Ohio schools 3, scattering 4. The figures presented here are, how- 
ever, concerned only with the 293 schools. 

^ The Montana list is, inadvertently, entirely omitted. Few Junior High Schools 
were, however, reported from this state. 



Almost precisely one-fourth (25.78%) of the accredited schools of the Association 
have taken steps intended to develop a six year high school system. Of these 293 
schools, almost exactly one-fourth (24.57%) have been established within the present 
school year. The growth toward the Junior High School is, therefore, remarkably 
rapid just at this hour, and analyses of the replies to the questionnaire seem to indi- 
cate that next year it will be even more rapid and complete. 

Precisely what constitutes a Junior High School (or anything that closely approx- 
imates it in fact) is a difficult question to answer dogmatically. While the replies to 
the questionnaire indicate that a goodly percentage of the school people have a reason- 
ably clear conception of its purpose and characteristics and have made a positive ap- 
proach to its realization, yet in numerous instances the modifications of the old type 
grammar school are so meager and half-hearted and purposeless and feeble that only 
by the exercise of much charity of spirit and liberality of judgment can they be re- 
garded as having caught even a glimpse of the new movement. Let it be repeated : All 
depends on definitions. But certainly, to the writer who scrutinized carefully each set 
•of replies received, there are very far from being 293 complete Junior High Schools in 
the Association territory. 

In respect to the external organization, almost every conceivable arrangement of 
grades possible is reported. One hundred thirty-three, or 45.39% of the entire num- 
ber, have the 7th and 8th grades only included. Eighty-nine, or 30.37%, have the 7th, 
Sth and 9th grades; twenty-two, or 7.50%, have the 6th, 7th and 8th grades; eighteen, 
or 6.14%, have an undifferentiated six-year high school; eleven, or 3.75%, have the 
eighth grade only included; eight, or 2.73%, have the Sth and 9th grades, and eleven, or 
3-75%, have some other arrangement different from any of the above groupings. 

Again, 168, or 57.33% of the entire number, state that their school is definitely 
styled the Junior High School; 46, or 15.69%, call it the Departmental School; 12, 
or 4.09%, have no special name, but designate the entire six grades as the High School, 
or the Six-Year High School; and 67, or 22.86%, have still other names employed. 
Among these are Intermediate School, Grammar School, Junior School, and quite 
often, names in honor of some local celebrity, as the John Smith School. 

Here once more both the external and the internal evidence is strong that, almost 
in scores of cases, the alleged reformed school plan has consisted primarily of an 
altered name. Possibly the departmental organization of subject-matter and teaching, 
possibly promotion by subject, and possibly one or two other desirable, but incon- 
spicuous and not vital, changes, have been made, but there is little to show that such 
schools have modified the purposes, the program of studies, the spirit, the methods, 
or the internal administration of the older type of school. In particular did these 
impressions strike deep in considering the reports of a large percentage of the schools 
in which the 7th and 8th grades, or the 6th, 7th and Sth grades were alone included 
in the "reformed" school. The same is likewise notably true in the cases of the 67 
schools listed in the table as "Others". It seems a conservative statement to make, 
therefore, that, for fully a third or more of these 293 schools, it is yet a long way to a 
true Junior High School. 

In the manner of housing the reformed school, only 49 cities, or 16.72%, claim to 
have for it a separate and distinct building apart from all other grades. Of the others, 
138, or 47.09%, say the Junior High School (or the school of the modified form under 
whatever name) is housed with the Senior High School, while 85, or 29.01%, state 
it is with the elementary school. Of the schools thus housed, 105, or 35.83%, are 
grouped in segregated portions of the common building. Here again, however, it is 
not safe to conclude that all these have the form or the spirit of a segregated or sep- 
arated school. Evidence is too clear in many instances that "segregation" means no 
more than has always been meant when classes or grades have had "home-rooms" and 
"home teachers". Perhaps, however, here is our safest lead in judging of the num- 
ber of schools that really provide secondary school training that is of a longer dura- 
tion than four years — that is, that approach closest to the theoretical Junior High 
School idea. This line of reasoning would give 187, (138 housed with the Senior High 
School plus 49 housed in separate buildings), with possibly 21 other schools not here 
reported in any manner. That is, the total number of fairly recognizable Junior High 
Schools is, on this basis, 208. 

Wherever the Junior High School is in operation the older type of the S-4 plan 
has, according to the replies received, gone out of existence except in the cases of 45 
towns. There is some evidence leading to the belief, however, that the question calling 
for a reply on this practice was, in several instances, slightly misunderstood. 



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In the statement of reasons why the reformed school plan has been established, 
the persons filling out the questionnaire gave differing answers. Gathered together, 
however, under fairly delimited headings, these replies may be classified thus: (i) In 
order better to provide for individual needs, 143 votes, or 48.80% of the number of 
schools reporting; (2) in order to provide differentiated curricula, 56 votes, or 19.11% 
of all schools; (3) in order to provide better teaching, 76 votes, or 25.93% of all 
schools ; (4) in order to make easier the transition to the specialized high school, "JJ 
votes, or 26.27% of all schools: (6) in order to provide promotion by subject, 54 
votes, or 18.43% of all schools; (6) in order to provide departmental teaching, 67 
votes, or 22.86% of all schools; and (7) in order to help pupils, by means of vocational 
guidance and otherwise, to prepare for life's problems more adequately and effectively, 
108 votes, or 36.86% of all schools. 

The North Central Association has. for some time in the past, recommended mak- 
ing the Junior High School serve any and all classes of pupils who could profit by 
its work, irrespective of what the earlier systematic education of the individual has 
been. That is, the Association has approved the principle of "skipping grades", if 
conditions seem to make such a procedure desirable for the individual pupil concerned. 
In practice today, it is to be observed, 108 school systems, or 36.86% of the entire 293 
which made reports, do admit pupils to the Junior High School privileges before com- 
pleting the previous grade. In other words, these schools base promotion on physical 
development and chronological age, as well as on intellectual attainments of a fixed 
conventional type. 

According to the figures given, there are at present enrolled in the 293 schools 
included in our study, 21,658 boys, and 27,710 girls — a total enrollment of 49,368. In- 
structing these pupils are 2,760 teachers, — 352 men teaching academic subjects and 338 
teaching vocational subjects, and 1,592 women teaching academic subjects and 478 
teaching vocational subjects. 

In the length of the school day and the length of the class periods within the day 
there is much diversity of practice — the range extending from 20 periods and 20 min- 
utes to 5 periods and 70 or 80 minutes. However, the seven, eight, nine, or ten period 
day is the most common — 23.54% having seven periods, 26.27%, eight periods, and 
26.27% having more than eight periods — and the class period of from 30 minutes to 
45 minutes is the most usual, — 166 schools, or 56.65%, employing this unit. Neverthe- 
less, 58 schools, or 19.79%, have class periods of 46 minutes to 60 minutes, while 16 
schools, or 5.46%, have class periods exceeding 60 minutes in length. 

Provision for supervised study, or showing pupils how to study, is almost an edu- 
cational fetish of the age, — particularly so in connection with the elementary schools 
and Junior High Schools. It was difficult from the replies received on this topic to 
sift out the spurious from the genuine. Nearly every school had study rooms or 
study periods presided over by teachers who, incidentally and on solicitation by the 
pupils, are expected to render assistance in studying lessons. Much of the so-called 
supervised study reported was, too obviously to be mistaken, of that type only. After 
eliminating all cases of doubtful character and including none but such as definitely 
set aside a portion of each class period for study under supervision, or else definitely 
provide study coaches in session rooms, the reports show that 173 schools, or 59.04%, 
do today have supervised study which, at least in form and plan, seems to be truly 
worthy of the name. 

One hundred fifty-three schools, or 52.21%, claim to allow pupils some choice of 
subject matter or of curricula — 48.46% providing for election by subjects, and 25.25% 
by curricula. In the remaining schools there is, confessedly, no pupil choice what- 
ever. The replies to this particular query, however, were not very satisfactory, there 
being much evidence that the terminology was not clearly understood. "Course", "cur- 
riculum" and "subject" were regarded, often, as synonymous words. All doubtful 
cases have, in consequence, been excluded from the computations here given, so that 
with the 102 schools or 34.81%, which state they have definitely outlined curricula, the 
figures must represent approximately the facts. 

Most schools seem to recognize that promotion by subject and departmental or- 
ganization of the work are essential elements in the Junior High School movement, 
for 241 schools, or 82.25%, have the first and 285 schools, or 97.26% have the second 
of these ideals in practice. That provision for vocational guidance, or, better styled, 
life guidance, is likewise an important element in any fully operating junior high 
school is attested by the fact that 136 schools, or 46.41%, make systematic use of the 
plan. 



It one purpose of the new organization of the school is to "bridge the gap" be- 
tween the 8th and gth or upper grades and thus prevent large numbers of pupils from 
being eliminated, the question is pertinently asked : Should graduation exercises of any 
sort be held at the end of the elementary or Junior high school period? Does not the 
practice tend to suggest that a stopping place has been reached? Certain it is that 
213 of the schools considered in this study think so, as but 80, or 28.30% of the entire 
number, hold graduation exercises of that kind. 

If the essence of a complete Junior high school is, as some believe, to be found 
in a modified program of studies, then the extent to which subjects not heretofore 
found in the elementary schools are at present included in the grades below the 9th 
grade constitutes one important test of a reformed school. The questionnaire did not 
seek to discover how much of the old material of the 7th and 8th grades has been 
abolished, or even shorn mightily of its pristine glory, but it did seek to learn which 
of the subjects heretofore regarded as the just prepossession of the four upper years 
of the high school, and which subjects that are relatively new to all grades of the 
public schools, have been incorporated into the programs of study for the grades 
belozv the 9th. The figures show the following : Latin is found below the Qth grade 
in 81 schools, or 27.64% of the total number; Modern Foreign Language, in 80, or 
27,30%; Algebra in 71, or 24.23%; General Science in 89, or 30.37%; Manual Train- 
ing in 260, or 88.73%; Domestic Science and Art in 259, or 88.39%; Drawing in 221, 
or 75.42%; Music in 210, or 71.67%; Agriculture in 76, or 25.93%; Ancient History 
(sometimes in the form of biographical stories) in 11, or 3.75%; General History of 
Modern Europe, or European Background of American History, in 19, or 6.48%; 
Commercial Work in its varied forms (but rarely more than one or two phases in the 
same school and these usually Bookkeeping or Typewriting) in 49, or 16.72%; Print- 
ing in 24, r 8.19%; and distinctive trade instruction in 15, or 5.11%. In other words, 
manual training, domestic science and art, drawing and music are thoroughly estab- 
lished in the curricula of the Junior High School, being found in approximately three- 
fourths of the schools. Commercial work and agriculture have also each gotten fair 
recognition. General science is rapidly advancing in favor. All of which seems to 
indicate that the Junior High Schools are taking rational account of the motor-minded 
individuals and the individuals who have been retarded in their intellectual develop- 
ment. For the most part, though, wherever manual training, domestic science and art 
and drawing are offered, they are prescribed for all pupils, indicating that these sub- 
jects are not designed for the motor-minded only, but as essential parts in the common 
elements of an education in a democracy. All these subjects except music and draw- 
ing are (with rare exceptions) scheduled for five class periods per week — in some 
schools double periods. 

Music, unfortunatel}', is as yet not regarded very seriously anywhere. Although 
the questionnaire sought only to bring out the facts respecting music other than 
chorus drill, the reports show clearly that few, if any, such courses in music exist in 
the schools here considered Two periods per week devoted to the subject constitute 
the common practice throughout the entire territory, and, as implied, little of this 
time apparently is giA'en to other phases than chorus work. If the Association believes 
with Plato, and Shakespeare, and the bards of all times that music has wonderful 
educative, socializing powers, the question arises, whether it ought not to exert a 
more positive influence in getting it incorporated in the schools in a more efifective 
manner than it has been hitherto ! 

Of the subjects formerly confined to the grades above the 8th, it is noticeable that 
transposition of position has, to a considerable degree, taken place in respect to alge- 
bra and foreign languages. In no report was there any positive evidence that algebra 
was part of a combined course in General mathematics, though doubtless such is the 
case in a very few instances. Of the modern foreign languages German, French, and 
Spanish each has its supporters, but no one of these languages has a decided lead in 
popular favor. 

In recording school credits, 202 schools, or 68.94%, adhere to the elementary 
school practice of doing so by subjects; 62, or 21.16% employ the more usual high 
school practice of recording by units; and 19, or 6.48%, use the still more uncommon 
scheme, adopted from the colleges and universities, of recording by hours. Here 
again the practices throw considerable light on the true character and spirit of the 
schools. 

Eighty-eight, or 30.03% of the schools, claim to have the same qualifications for 
Junior High School teachers as for Senior High School teachers; 92, or 31.39%, claim 



to have the same salary schedules operating for both groups; and 103, or 55 -15%. 
have Junior High School teachers teaching some classes in the Senior High School. 

Perhaps as good a criterion as the study gives of the independent status of the 
Junior High School is that evidenced by the degree of universality of the provision 
for a Junior High School Principal. One hundred seventy-six schools, or 60.06%, 
claim to have such an official. Nevertheless, in the matter of responsible supervision 
of the Junior High Schools, 79, or 26.96%, place the power solely in the hands of the 
superintendent; 167, or 56.99%, give it to the Junior High School principal; 72, or 
24.57%, subsume it under the duties of the Senior High School principal; and 19, or 
6.48%, distribute it elsevi^here. 

In respect to the principles of discipline used, 193 schools, or 65.87%, claim that 
they are freer than those employed in the elementary schools, while 148 schools, or 
50,51%, assert they are less free than the principles used in the Senior High Schools. 

According to generally accepted educational theory, the Junior High School has 
been developed largely because it lends itself better than the older type of school to 
the multiple needs of many classes of pupils heretofore not effectively reached by the 
schools. The present study seems to indicate that this theory is accepted in practice, 
for 130 schools, or 44.36%, are making positive provision for the individual who has 
before him a short educational career and must get from the schools what he can get 
and get it quickly; 164, or 55-97%, seek to adapt and adjust the school work, where 
necessary, to the peculiar needs of the sickly pupils 153, or 52.21%, give especial con- 
sideration to the youths who are inapt at book study and who do better work with 
more concrete or vocational studies; and 139, or 47.44%, make provision for those 
who can devote but a part of their time to school duties. 

Finally, of the 293 schools reporting, it is the expressed belief of 199, or 67.91% 
of the entire number, that the Junior High School is positively advantageous. Spe- 
cifically, the principals of these schools think so because, say 131, or 44.70%, it keeps 
more pupils in school; because, say 195, or 66.55%, it tends to produce better scholar- 
ship; because, say 180, or 61.43%, it tends to produce better citizens; because, say 
204, or 69.62%, it tends to produce better socially equipped pupils; because, say 187, 
or 63.82%, it tends to produce better moral and social conditions in the schools them- 
selves. 

Moreover, judging from the returns sent in, the Junior High School is meeting 
with popular favor wherever it is being established. Principals in 229 schools, or 
78.15% of the entire number, report that parents are better pleased with the new ar- 
rangement than with the old; 234, or 79.86%, state that teachers are better pleased; 
and 231, or 78.83%, say that the administrative officers are better pleased. The com- 
bined impressions gained from this study certainly make it clear that pupils also are 
better pleased. 

In general summary, therefore, it may be said that approximately 300 schools in 
the North Central territory have consciously sought to take steps looking to the mod- 
ification of the 8-4 plan of organization in harmony with the Junior High School idea ; 
that possibly 175, or 60%, of these have already incorporated enough of the commonly 
accepted characteristics of a Junior High School to be entitled to bear that name; that 
another group of 75 (approximately 25%) have made good beginnings, but have ad- 
vanced only a short distance on the road to reform; and that the remaining 43, or 
approximately 15% of the whole number, are deceiving themselves with names, — are 
mistaking the husk for the kernel — and have need of much instruction. Again, how- 
ever, as was said at the beginning: All depends on definitions. Perhaps the North 
Central Association could do no greater service at the present time than to begin, 
cautiously and gradually, the standardization of the Junior High School. 



020 974 769 




